Alden Carrow's Poetry Podcast
In the autumn of 1817, exiled from England and on the run from a continent's worth of scandal, Lord Byron sat at a desk above the Adriatic and addressed the sea. Roll on, thou deep and dark blue Ocean — roll! He had watched his reputation collapse, his marriage break, and a society close its doors against him. And in the ocean he found, with something close to relief, a force that had noticed none of it — a force that could not be broken in turn. In this episode, Alden Carrow explores an idea that has sharpened over years of walking the Cornish coast: some places are not weathered. They are practised. The guest poem is Lord Byron's "Apostrophe to the Ocean," the closing movement of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1818) — by common consent the greatest sea-poetry the Romantic movement produced. Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage: all gone, while the ocean stands unchanged. Man marks the earth with ruin, Byron writes, his control stops with the shore. A wild, almost mocking meditation on the futility of human pretension against something genuinely vast and genuinely indifferent. Alden then reads his own poem, "Bude," a portrait of a north-Cornish town that has made an art of leaning into the gale. Where the breakers crash on Summerleaze and the sea pool is carved in stone and tide, a small community has practised something the rest of England has forgotten: how to stand at the edge, and find joy there. A town that leans into the gale, and finds its strength in every tale. The episode closes with a discussion of the poetry of community — what small coastal towns actually do that great cities have forgotten. The rhythm of shared survival. The visibility of the individual. Why there is no poetry in convenience, and why resilience is not about being untouchable but about being touchable, vulnerable to the elements and to each other, and finding strength in that shared state. Competition Email your guest poem suggestion to aldencarrow78@gmail.com to enter the draw for a personally signed copy of Cornwall In Verse — Tide To Tor In Poetry, sent to you by hand. The next guest poem will come from one of you. New episodes every Wednesday at 6am. Slow down. Listen closely. There is poetry to be found. Some places are not weathered. They are practised.
32 episodios
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