I spent the weekend over the border in Derbyshire, visiting my cousin, and on Saturday we found ourselves dodging the rain in Belper. Where better to shelter awhile than in a large charity bookshop? There I spotted an anthology edited by Wendy Cope – The Funny Side: 101 Humorous Poems. Having found much to enjoy in another of her anthologies, Heaven on Earth: 101 Happy Poems*, I naturally bought this one. When I went to pay for it, the helpful volunteer at the cash desk told me he had another little anthology out the back which I might be interested in... It was Short and Sweet: 101 Very Short Poems, edited by Simon Armitage – so of course I took that too.
The poems in Short and Sweet range in length from 13 lines (any more and they'd be trespassing on a companion volume, Don Paterson's excellent 101 Sonnets) to no lines at all, the latter represented by Don Paterson's On Going to Meet a Zen Master in the Kyushu Mountains and Not Finding Him. None of Dick Davis's epigrams appears in Short and Sweet, but I found this brilliant three-liner by Yeats, which was new to me –
Three Movements
Shakespearean fish swam the sea, far away from land;
Romantic fish swam in nets coming to the hand;
What are all those fish that lie gasping on the strand?
A first look also yielded this, by Geoffrey Hill – one of the most shattering four-line poems I have ever read...
I Had Hope When Violence Was Ceas't
Dawnlight freezes against the east-wire.
The guards cough 'raus! 'raus! We flinch and grin,
Our flesh oozing towards its last outrage.
That which is taken from me is not mine.
[The title is from Paradise Lost, Book 11: 'I had hope When violence was ceas't, and Warr on Earth, All would have then gon well, peace would have crown'd With length of happy dayes the race of man; But I was farr deceav'd; for now I see Peace to corrupt no less than Warr to waste...']
* an anthology which includes Dick Davis's great love poem 'Uxor Vivamus'.