Helen Farish's fourth collection The Penny Dropping is shortlisted for the TS Eliot Prize 2024: Prize readings in London on 12 January 2025. Her joint online launch...
so as not to miss a note of the broadcast symphony.
*
The dog itself
Memory rounds this up, breathless,
like the dog herding sheep
below the bedroom window:
dropped at my feet are smells –
wool in the rain, my aunt’s
cigarette smoked on the hoof,
gorse also, firs making green
(and what it all means,
that too has a smell).
Not forgetting the dog itself,
so pleased with its work,
I must pen it in quick.
Contents List
I
11 A borrowing
12 My Casablanca
13 Allington Cross
14 Palermo, da capo
15 Missing the rain
17 Jane Eyre, a sequel
22 Underground city
23 The dog itself
24 Pancake Day
25 De Bottelier, Bruges
26 L’homme tranquille
27 Pastoral
28 Elizabeth and Darcy go walking out
29 Storm, Bavaria
30 Athens
31 A goddess, a city and a tree
II
35 Calling
36 Judgement Day
37 Tea-time at my aunt’s
38 In deep
39 Cahier
40 La Pergola du Parc, Casablanca
41 Rough Guide to Vienna
42 The death of Doctor Zhivago
45 HMS Affray
46 Cavafy’s suitcase
47 Moon x 6
48 Cumberland, 1974
49 Twelfth Night: or, What You Will
50 Shift
51 Winter toad
52 Still life
53 The Market Gardener’s Tale, 1953
56 What you once owned
57 The bus to Oualidia
58 Aftermath
59 Daughters of a suicide
60 Saving the ladybird
61 Tess has a word with Hardy
62 Angela
63 Six hen pheasants in my garden last Tuesday
64 In Rainsbarrow Wood
III
67 Complimentary calendar
68 How to make pasche eggs
70 Fallen apple tree
71 Let me count the ways and the times I’ve walked round Buttermere
72 Custodian
73 The Old Chancel, Ireby
74 Reading the label
75 The thing itself
76 Friday night at the Sphinx
77 The glow
78 Low Lorton ¼ High Lorton ¼
79 The monkey clock
81 A life in geography
82 In the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts
83 Remanence
84 Literacy lesson
Related Reviews
REVIEWS OF NOCTURNES AT NOHANT:
‘A delicate collection which winds differing melodies into a truly lovely, if quiet, narrative, melding reality and fiction seamlessly.’ – Jennifer A. McGowan, Orbis, on Nocturnes at Nohant
‘A sustained feat of imaginative recreation,’ – Keith Richmond, Tribune
‘Sometimes light-hearted and sometimes solemn, the potency of these poems lies in their beautifully observed details.’ - PBS Bulletin
‘Nocturnes at Nohant is an original extremely intelligent working through of a complex relationship between two artists and their work. I loved the poems. The sequence works so well as a story and is so nuanced I felt completely absorbed in it. And full of admiration for Farish’s great skill.’ – Melvyn Bragg
REVIEWS OF INTIMATES:
‘A whip-smart, tough lyricism, which is always alloyed by her sense of shape and economy. It's been ages since I've read a first book of poems as bold, carried off with such élan.’ – Paul Farley
‘Intimates is a passionate book. Its theme is ancient (the unthinkable pain of lost love) and Farish thinks hard about both pain and happiness. Much of Farish’s art lies in concealment. The economy of her poems and her confidence in their means enable her to speak with convincing directness where other poets might lapse into gestures' – Sean O’Brien, Sunday Times
‘Farish uses the first-person speaker with a moving immediacy – as often in the poems that address the death of her father – or deploys it with considerable inventiveness and ingenuity… Intimates is an intensely lyrical work. Farish is adept at conveying a moment of being in a handful of pared, precise images, and she can sometimes astonish with a single line' – Jane Griffiths, TLS
‘A debut poetry collection by a poet whose voice is already mature, assured and at times very funny' – Claire Harman, Evening Standard
‘These are intelligent, brave pieces that make you wince and smile’ – Jackie Kay, Sunday Herald Books of the Year
‘Helen Farish writes with extraordinary candour, wittily, movingly, with sensuous intelligence.’ – David Constantine
‘The intimacy of Helen Farish’s poems is of an extraordinary kind: at once close to and distant from family and body and thought. The poems are bodily and disembodied, emotionally engaged and detached, passionate and reasoned. Nobody writes with quite this variety of intelligence.’ – Bernard O’Donoghue.