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The Ages of Water Walter Perrie

The Ages of Water By Walter Perrie

The Ages of Water by Walter Perrie


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Summary

A collection of poems by Walter Perrie, prize-winning Scottish poet

The Ages of Water Summary

The Ages of Water by Walter Perrie

This major collection of mature work by a Scottish poet who still lacks the degree of recognition he deserves is, as implied by its epigraph, a complex composite autobiography of the inner life. It articulates the progression of the self from infancy to adulthood and onwards to the long preparation for death which is the path we must all take. One of the principal ways in which it does so lies in its intense engagement with and love of nature, for, to cite the title of a key poem, All Things are Signs, as Boehme knew. More than that, they are shadows cast by the invisible, and the extraordinary sensuous beauty of so many of these poems is the measure of the spiritual sensibility which pervasively informs them.Most of these poems are quite short and lyrical (even the title poem, which is much the longest, is really a set of related lyrics). Apparently simple in structure, they are in fact very concentrated and sometimes quite difficult, and of great technical assurance. They demand very close attention and careful re-reading, and will be found to repay them richly. Pervaded by Celtic mythology and underpinned by a philosophical mind-set, the poems are deeply rooted in the area of the Perthshire countryside where Perrie has lived for many years, and this rootedness is an important binding factor which confers unity on this large and in many ways diverse collection which represents an exciting and significant new stage in the poet's development. A note fromJohn Herdman, novelist and short-story writer. In The Ages of Water Walter Perrie confirms that he is a poet writing at the zenith of his powers - self-confident in his way with words, ever observant of the life that surrounds him and thoroughly at home with himself and his world. To the clarity that has always characterised his work he has introduced a fresh and convincing sense of harmony which is at once both natural and gracious. This is poetry of the highest order. A a Note from Trevor Royle, former Literature Director of the Scottish Arts Council 1971-1979The Ages of Water is a voyage, a verbal exploration of Nature's strength and guiding spirit and the sometimes reluctance of humans to accept its power and benevolence. Walter Perrie has created a new Pastoral Psalter, a revived Book of Hours, a celebration of, and an acknowledgement to, our tidal Master: Water. A note from Hayden Murphy, Poet & Arts Journalist

About Walter Perrie

Walter Perrie is a Scottish poet, editor, critic and publisher. He was born into a mining village in South Lanarkshire in June 1949 and after Hamilton Academy, worked for several years in the Burgh Library before removing to Edinburgh in 1970 to read for an M.A. in philosophy, to which he later added the M. Phil. from Stirling. By the age of thirty he had won a Gregory award for Poetry and his first major book of poetry (A Lamentation for the Children) had won a Scottish Arts Council book award. He had also been co-founder, with George Hardie, of Chapman magazine and was playing an active part in Scottish literary life, having interviewed Hugh MacDiarmid and organised Scottish participation in the first International Cambridge Poetry Festival, represented by Duncan Glen, Donald Campbell and Sorley Maclean. During the 1980s he travelled widely in Europe and North America, holding the post of Scottish-Canadian exchange fellow and was later writer in residence at the University of Stirling. At the same time he became managing editor of Margin, an international arts quarterly under the editorship of the American writer Robin Magowan. In 1988 he was the recipient of an award for his poetry from the Ingram-Merrill foundation and was later to meet and correspond with James Merrill and in 2017 to hold a Merrill Fellowship, living in Merrill's former home in Stonington, Connecticut. In the late 1980s he moved to the Perthshire village of Dunning. In 1990, in the context of the collapse of the eastern bloc, he was to drive across eastern Europe to write Roads that Move and in 2000 was awarded a Society of Authors travelling scholarship. It was from Dunning that, in 2005, along with the Scottish novelist and short-story writer John Herdman, he founded Fras magazine and Publications and has gone on to publish over thirty books and pamphlets of Scottish letters, including interviews with Donald Campbell, Trevor Royle, Margaret Bennett and Alasdair Gray as well as twice-yearly issues of Fras magazine. Perrie's literary interests have encompassed essays on W. H. Auden, Lord Byron, Hugh MacDiarmid, Edwin Morgan and Muriel Spark. He has translated some of the Fables of La Fontaine as well as poems by Jacques Prevert and continues to give French-language talks on subjects of Franco-Scottish interest.

Additional information

GOR011471772
9781913162122
1913162125
The Ages of Water by Walter Perrie
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Grace Note Publications
20201101
134
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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