Alden Carrow's Poetry Podcast
On a fell above Buttermere, a mountain is quietly coming apart. This is Haystacks — Alfred Wainwright's favourite fell in all of Lakeland, the one he asked to be scattered upon when he died. In 1991, near the tarn called Innominate, he was. In this episode, Alden Carrow asks a question that follows every walker eventually: is anything ever truly lost, or does it only change its form? The guest poem is Percy Bysshe Shelley's "The Cloud" (1820), spoken by the cloud itself — a being that dissolves into rain and reforms out of the blue, endlessly, and refuses to call any of it dying. I change, but I cannot die. Alden then reads his own poem, "Haystacks," an unflinching portrait of volcanic rock fractured by ten thousand winters, a rusted tramway gone to ghost, and a walker standing at the rim, staring into the cloud's white core. The episode closes with a discussion on writing the landscape you want to become part of — what changes when a poet writes a place not as a visitor, but as somewhere they intend to belong to completely, even after death. Competition Email your guest poem suggestion to aldencarrow78@gmail.com to enter the draw for a signed copy of Cumbria In Verse — Lakes To Fells In Poetry, sent to you by hand. New episodes every Wednesday at 6am. Slow down. Listen closely. Nothing here is lost. It is only changing state.
34 episodios
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