Gjør som tusenvis av andre bokelskere
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Be my servantSoul Gnome in your salamander planet,be Jack the Lad, be Jack in the Green,be Jumping Jack in a quicksilver cosmosof arsenic, ammonia and brimstone. Be mynecrotic juggler, conjure your waxy andpoisonous valency to shape the warlock lightthe simple fear as the unfostered soulsof stillborn children lost betweenHeaven's bulb and the Inferno's flame.PP
A vulgar trip into the mock heroic: an entertainment from the years after the Second World War.
A series of poems based on the Arthurian legend with illustrations by the author
Keith Howden continues to evoke the passions and memories associated with his lifelong contact with the moorland of the East Lancashire Pennines and the characters who live there.
Keith Howden was born near Burnley in 1932. He is married, with three children. After National Service and work as a laboratory assistant, he taught English and modern European fiction with a major interest in 'the text as event' at Nottingham Trent University. Among his many poetry pamphlets are Joe Anderson, Daft Jack's Ideal Republics, Pauper Grave, Hanging Alice Nutter and Barlow Agonistes. He has published three full-length collections, Marches of Familiar Landscape (Peterloo 1978), Onkonkay (Peterloo (1984) and Jolly Roger (Smokestack 2012). Recently, with his son, the composer Matthew Howden, he has completed two poetry music collaborations, with accompanying discs: The Matter of Britain (PRE Rome 2009) and Barley Top (Redroom 2013).
It has proved difficult to separate the usually melodramatically rendered life from a creative achievement that, despite a further number of successfully achieved canvases, depends essentially on the series, Landscapes with Handless Man, a linked sequence of large canvases (all approximately six feet by six feet) created in the last years of life before (as he perhaps unbelievably claimed) the events they illustrate and his later incarceration, after a charge of murder. in a Mental Institution. After the first Exhibition of the Landscapes, Matthews achieved a short-lived cult status which to some smaller extent has continued to the present. The material of the Landscapes is apparently an allegorical interpretation and a reconstruction/prediction (again there must be some doubt) of his own life in which curiously stylised industrial or moorland backgrounds hold recognisable and, though the treatment is hardly realistic, recurrent figures, animals, birds and 'metaphoric objects.'
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