Original Poem
History by John Burnside (1955-) St Andrews: West Sands; September 2001 Today as we flew the kites - the sand spinning off in ribbons along the beach and that gasoline smell from Leuchars gusting across the golf links; the tide far out and quail-grey in the distance; people jogging, or stopping to watch as the war planes cambered and turned in the morning light – today - with the news in my mind, and the muffled dread of what may come – I knelt down in the sand with Lucas gathering shells and pebbles finding evidence of life in all this driftwork: snail shells; shreds of razorfish; smudges of weed and flesh on tideworn stone. At times I think what makes us who we are is neither kinship nor our given states but something lost between the world we own and what we dream about behind the names on days like this our lines raised in the wind our bodies fixed and anchored to the shore and though we are confined by property what tethers us to gravity and light has most to do with distance and the shapes we find in water reading from the book of silt and tides: the rose or petrol blue of jellyfish and sea anemone combining with a child's first nakedness. Sometimes I am dizzy with the fear of losing everything - the sea, the sky, all living creatures, forests, estuaries: we trade so much to know the virtual we scarcely register the drift and tug of other bodies scarcely apprehend the moment as it happens: shifts of light and weather and the quiet, local forms of history: the fish lodged in the tide beyond the sands; the long insomnia of ornamental carp in public parks captive and bright and hung in their own slow-burning transitive gold; jamjars of spawn and sticklebacks or goldfish carried home from fairgrounds to the hum of radio; but this is the problem: how to be alive in all this gazed-upon and cherished world and do no harm a toddler on a beach sifting wood and dried weed from the sand and puzzled by the pattern on a shell his parents on the dune slacks with a kite plugged into the sky all nerve and line: patient; afraid; but still, through everything attentive to the irredeemable.
Translation (English)
About the Poet
John Burnside (Contemporary)
John Burnside was a Scottish writer known for his poetry and prose. He won the T. S. Eliot Prize and the Forward Poetry Prize for his book 'Black Cat Bone' in 2011. Burnside's work often explores themes of nature, memory, and the human condition.
Read more on Wikipedia →Historical Context
- Literary Form
- Free verse
- When Written
- September 2001
- Background
- The poem 'History' by John Burnside reflects on the events of September 11, 2001, and the impact of such historical moments on personal and collective consciousness. It explores themes of loss, fear, and the struggle to find meaning in a world marked by tragedy.
Sources: http://frodosoup.blogspot.com/2018/01/history-by-john-burnside-as-level.html, https://alevelenglish20162017.wordpress.com/2017/05/04/history-john-burnside/, https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/john-burnside, https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poet/john-burnside/
Detailed Explanation
Themes
Literary Devices
Word Dictionary
| Word | Meaning | Translation | Transliteration |
|---|---|---|---|
| cambered | arched, curved | slightly curved or arched | cam-berd |
| tideworn | worn by the tide | shaped by the tide | tide-worn |
| driftwork | debris, remnants | debris left by the tide | drift-work |
| transitive | temporary, passing | temporary or changing | tran-si-tive |
| irredeemable | unable to be saved | cannot be saved or changed | ir-re-deem-a-ble |
| kinship | family relationship | family connection | kin-ship |
| estuary | river mouth | where river meets sea | es-tu-ar-y |
| ornamental | decorative | for decoration | or-na-men-tal |
| insomnia | sleeplessness | can't sleep | in-som-ni-a |
| silt | fine sand, mud | fine earth particles | silt |
| anemone | sea creature | sea animal with tentacles | a-nem-o-ne |
| tether | tie, bind | to tie or bind | teth-er |
| quail-grey | gray like a quail | gray like a quail | quail-grey |
| gazed-upon | looked at | looked at or observed | gazed-upon |
| dune slacks | low areas in dunes | low areas between dunes | dune slacks |
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