Poet

Richard Chadburn

Sent a bee to catch a beein the mews; in the mall; in the meadow.The buzz of the wren in the undergrowthwas the ache that came back to me.Put out a dog to chap a dogin the paddock; the hillock; the border.The bark of the crow was all that wingedit back through the whispering fog.Pitted a horse against a horseon the downs and out to the grazing.The whinnying fox breathed the yellow soundthat wound its way back through the gorse.Hired a man to lasso the worldwhose voice gave out as the line unfurled.

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Richard Chadburn has been steeped in poetry since his teenage years.  It took three score years and ten before he realised that the poems of his own engendered by his wide-ranging reading of contemporary poets might be worthy of publication.  So far this celebration of the way poems surprise poets is his only published poem, although editors other than Gerry Cambridge of The Dark Horse are now being troubled with submissions.  He describes himself as a cured accountant who worked in industry, but retired into poetry. He now lives in Highland Perthshire in Scotland.

Autumn & Winter 2020

Scotland

Editor
Gerry Cambridge

U.S. Assistant Editor
Jennifer Goodrich

U.S. Contributing Editor
Marcia Menter

The Dark Horse was founded in 1995 by the Scottish poet Gerry Cambridge. It is an international literary magazine committed to British, Irish and American poetry, and is published from Scotland.

We like to think that the journal is characterised by a clear-sighted scepticism and an eye for the genuine. We understand that hype, in its presumption of consensus, is irrelevant to readers of any individuality. Not that we equate poetry with solemnity. We are, by turns, or sometimes simultaneously, serious, wry, humorous, iconoclastic.

While we are glad to print poetry in metre and rhyme, we remember Randall Jarrell’s “Where poems have hearts, a metronome is beating here.” We believe that we can recognise poems of sound heart. Not being evangelical or overly partisan, we also print compelling free verse.

We publish, too, a mix of stylish and engaged essays, reviews, interviews, polemics and appreciations. At times these are groundbreaking: our interviews with, for example, Philip Hobsbaum and the poet-scientist G. F. Dutton are the most extensive of their kind available.

We have published new work by established poets including Edwin Morgan, Anne Stevenson, Wendy Cope, Anthony Hecht, Douglas Dunn, Robert Nye, Richard Wilbur, Kay Ryan, Vicki Feaver, Matthew Sweeney and many more, but are at least as proud of our discoveries, whether of individual poems or of poets previously unknown to us.We also love to highlight excellent yet neglected or overlooked figures. The contemporary poetry scene, for all its colour, has a short memory which has less to do with quality than with fashion. We attempt to honour literary quality, not literary fashion.

The Dark Horse is in the tradition of the finest poetry magazines: engaged, at times contrarian, and with a commitment to excellence as we perceive it.

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