Poem of the Week
BARMOUTH by Ruth Padel
With The Lost World reading campaign sweeping libraries near you, and the nation remembering Charles Darwin at 200, Ruth Padel pays tribute to her great-great grandfather in this compelling sequence of biographical poems (Darwin: A Life in Poems, Chatto & Windus, 12.99). This one imagines Darwin aged ten, in 1819, when his family went on holiday to Plas Edwards, or Barmouth, in North Wales.
'A child on a beach, alone.
Grey-eyed, thickset, kneeling to look.
A blowy day. A large black and scarlet
hemipterous insect. Many moths
including zygaena. A cicindela –
largest genus of the Tiger beetle –
not found in Shropshire.'
Why does every gentleman not
become an ornithologist?
Gulls and cormorants take their way home
at evening on a wild, irregular course.
You can borrow Darwin: A Life in Poems from the Scottish Poetry Library, which also lends by post. Tel: 0131-557 2876, e-mail reception@spl.org.uk or visit www.spl.org.uk
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Weather for Edinburgh
Wednesday 23 May 2012
Today
Sunny spells
Temperature: 11 C to 21 C
Wind Speed: 13 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Sunny spells
Temperature: 12 C to 21 C
Wind Speed: 10 mph
Wind direction: North east

