Since I last had something to show here, an extraordinary event happened, for me at least. I applied and was accepted into the Manchester Metropolitan University Writing School to do an MA in Creative Writing (Poetry). So here I am writing this post
from the Library of MMU. It’s both an exciting and daunting project. The excitement has me like a child in a toy shop, new ideas, new writing and a new space to making my writing my main job. I have chosen to turn up here every Tuesday to do a class.
(The fizzle factor of an online course would be too great for me) This will go on for the next two years. My brain is already in overload.
We have a writing workshop every week where we present our work and receive feedback from the class (there are eight
of us). In the course of writing and finding new ways of doing things, two of us in the class came across a poetry form called The Ghazal. It is to be found in Arab poetry and especially in Persian. The form is quite structured. So as an experiment, I had
a go. That’s what you see on this page. I hope you enjoy and as usual please read, pass it on and give me some feedback.
On the return to study - a Ghazal
I sit at a desk in a quiet large room, in a return to study.
My pen roams the line of its own volition, in a return to study.
I listen to scraping of metal along wooden floors, squeaking of
chairs, coughing, sneezing, in all positions, as they return to study.
Across all the space, fingers are tapping, keyboards are clicking,
shaping thoughts and ideas, on a mission, in a return to study,
to finish a work, to start
a new train from an unformed haze
haul into words by the decision to return to study
to capture, to shape, form a piece of fine work that will attract
applause, win a good grade and fruition, because of return to study.
Through
quiet and pain excitement will reign inside of the chest,
word follows word, become ammunition in the return to study.
Until finally sorted, reread and reworded, the manuscript done,
Pierre all bound up in completion, to end the return to
study.
Peter Clarke
January 2019
Gina Hayden
22.02.2019 18:28
Peter, fabulous news, very well done.. how exciting!
Máire Sheahan
22.02.2019 16:11
Just saw yourself and Clíodhna on Facebook, Peter. Clicked this link. Congrats and much fun, learning and creativity in Manchester. Loved Ghazal! Máire
Phil
10.02.2019 23:34
Congrats on getting accepted Peter, sounds like an amazing opportunity. I kike the look of the Ghazal, must check it out further.
Margaret Dromey
09.02.2019 20:25
Congratulation Peter and I love the Gazal. Well done and look forward to reading much more of your work. Have a ball studying.
Marguerite Colgan
09.02.2019 09:05
Peter, cobbling words brings us into the workshop, all buzz and busy as each creates, ideas caught, fitted into word jigsaw. At the window looking inI catch the excitement. Go Neiri go brea leat,
Clíodhna
08.02.2019 21:50
I like the style very much. As Fíona said: in full admiration of your "return to study"!
Fíona
08.02.2019 17:40
I Love it Peter, and am in full admiration of your 'return to study'....From someone who has been there, done that, I know that palpable feeling of excitement and terror in equal measure!! Congrats!!
Latest comments
25.11 | 22:15
Grief is experience through the mundane. Simple but powerful. The accompanying image really compliments the poem.
07.11 | 11:14
Hi Peter,
A great observation! Social media can be a scary place... I also need to reduce my time there
Hugs,
John.x
06.11 | 16:24
A great one, Peter, in the context you describe. I don't read social media myself, I doubt my equilibrium could stand it. 'The balance of his mind disturbed' yes, I think it would be.
06.11 | 15:59
Yes, gossip is a weapon of mass destruction.
In my business as well as personal life I have zero tolerance.