Nowadays, poets laureate are not donnish port-drinkers, but modern, happening, right-on types. Probably drink Mexican beer with a piece of lime stuffed in the neck of the bottle. Or at least that's what I imagined Andrew Motion doing, despite being an Oxford chap. So they get bunged £5750 instead. Motion was a pretty hopeless poet laureate, though I did think his "Regime Change" read quite well, notwithstanding the lefty angle.
Now we have Carol Ann Duffy, who I fear would have added lemon to the splendid Taylor or Fonseca port that came with the job. Not the shy or retiring type, Carol Ann. She described her appointment as "a historic day for women". Charles Moore reports that "she says she wants 300 years of female poet laureates to balance the past three centuries of males".
Oh dear. I think she may be missing the point. Good poetry is what we want, not affirmative action. Moore continues:
She has lots of ideas about ‘the vocation of poetry’, and wants to use the laureateship to get her fellow poets into schools, preach about how homosexuality (she is a lesbian) is ‘a lovely, ordinary thing’ etc. I fear that the post may suffer from what economists call ‘producer capture’. Miss Duffy says that in her conversations with ministers and with Buckingham Palace, ‘I was told there was no expectation that I would write royal poetry.’
I would have thought that our Parliament sinking to its nadir of dishonour would be a good time for the old wordsmith to rustle up a cheery sonnet. Betjeman would have known what to do.
Luckily, we have our own Betjeman of the Blog, a modern Wikipling, if you like: Nick Drew, you cheer us up! http://cityunslicker.blogspot.com/2009/05/very-very-odd.html for his latest offering. He'd get a bottle of Taylor 83 opened for him in this house were he ever to visit it. And not a sniff of lemon.
You know, looking at her picture I was amazed to discover she was a lesbian.
ReplyDeletemy pleasure, my pleasure
ReplyDeleteTaylor '83, Egad ! that trumps even that bottle of the Tuscan's best olive
I may be moved to saddle up & accept ...
Pip, I cheated. I looked up a picture of Andrea Dworkin, who was the the first and most famous of the dungaree-wearing bull dykes.
ReplyDeleteAs far as I know, Duffy does not wear dungarees.
She belts out a good tune though.
ReplyDeleteI have Andrea's oeuvre Idle :-)
ReplyDeleteI have never looked into Andrea's oeuvre, lil.
ReplyDeleteWay too scary.
I consumed it in the early 80's. Never managed Pornography cover to cover though.
ReplyDeleteas a published poet, I feel entitled to say that I do not rate her and I HATE the way she reads her poems. I shall be gunning for the PL job...which, given my advancing years, I will never get BUT I would like to demonstrate that one can be a poet and wear Prada...
ReplyDeleteAs a pretend poet, and the son of a published poet, foxy, I feel entitled to say that I agree with you.
ReplyDeleteI should add that I don't wear Prada.
ReplyDeleteYou could, Idle. It's all about style.
ReplyDeleteI do not recognise Italian names when it comes to a chap's 'style', pip.
ReplyDeleteAll the stylish Italian aristos I've met were kitted out by Huntsman or Meyer & Mortimer on Savile Row; none of that shiny baggy suiting so beloved of TV presenters and spivs the world over.
True. True.
ReplyDeleteI see that "Benny" from Crossroads has had a sex change....
ReplyDeleteI too was glad you explained her sexual orientation: the dungarees and Boyle-type hairdo gave no external clue.
ReplyDeleteAndrea lived with a toyboy.
ReplyDeleteThe toyboy woz a gayer, lil.
ReplyDelete