As a very small child I would read Mother Goose rhymes, almost daily. Winnie the Pooh lived in my bookshelf and the Hundred Acre Wood (aka Ashdown forest) in my vivid imagination..... I had the original version of Winnie the Pooh mind you, the one illustrated by E.H. Shepard, not the Disney version of my son's generation. I still have my books, Now We are Six, When We Were Very Young and so on (although I am not fortunate enough to have hard copy first edition prints; mine are frayed, well loved, paperbacks), you can find the list at the Wikipedia link but I digress.
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| Picture from Sotheby's sold catalogue |
So, back to poetry...
I won't profess to be able to quote poetry verbatim nor have a vast knowledge of poets themselves, but my love for it has never diminished over the years, only the time I have to spend reading it seems to have dwindled.. Dylan Thomas, T.S.Eliot, Walter de la Mare are a few whose works can be found on my bookshelves.
I never put much thought to it as a child but I loved the imagery poetry created. The pleasure those images gave me within the secrecy of my mind, it was my own version of reality, a place I where I would spend most of my time.
I was never one for faery tales or dolls; but poetry, insects and stuffed animals were my faery tales. My world was filled with Beatrix Potter like creatures due, in large part, to the stories and songs told and sung to me by my maternal grandmother (who, by some strange co-incidence, had the married name of Potter). Her stories, sadly none of which I can recall, led me into an Eden of childish dreams. And though in later life we grew distant and animosity darkened our relationship, my childish self remembers with a great deal of love and joy the moments I shared with her and how her propensity for drawing out the imagination in me is hugely responsible for forming the creative side of nature.
To this day, when I am at a loss for inspiration, I often revert to reading poetry or stories which evoke an emotional response to a subject, thing, creature or person. My music collection is eclectic and I will listen to whatever it is which feeds that emotion in order to draw on the fragment of my personality from whence my creation is emanating at any given time. The source is never the same, each piece of art or work I do represents a tiny piece of my soul.
Were it not for poetry being my first love and for my grandmothers devotion to me as a child, I often wonder if the realm of creativity which lives within me would ever have been discovered, nurtured and come, in turn, to be so deeply loved by myself and if not; what would be in its place I wonder?!
I won't profess to be able to quote poetry verbatim nor have a vast knowledge of poets themselves, but my love for it has never diminished over the years, only the time I have to spend reading it seems to have dwindled.. Dylan Thomas, T.S.Eliot, Walter de la Mare are a few whose works can be found on my bookshelves.
I never put much thought to it as a child but I loved the imagery poetry created. The pleasure those images gave me within the secrecy of my mind, it was my own version of reality, a place I where I would spend most of my time.
I was never one for faery tales or dolls; but poetry, insects and stuffed animals were my faery tales. My world was filled with Beatrix Potter like creatures due, in large part, to the stories and songs told and sung to me by my maternal grandmother (who, by some strange co-incidence, had the married name of Potter). Her stories, sadly none of which I can recall, led me into an Eden of childish dreams. And though in later life we grew distant and animosity darkened our relationship, my childish self remembers with a great deal of love and joy the moments I shared with her and how her propensity for drawing out the imagination in me is hugely responsible for forming the creative side of nature.
To this day, when I am at a loss for inspiration, I often revert to reading poetry or stories which evoke an emotional response to a subject, thing, creature or person. My music collection is eclectic and I will listen to whatever it is which feeds that emotion in order to draw on the fragment of my personality from whence my creation is emanating at any given time. The source is never the same, each piece of art or work I do represents a tiny piece of my soul.
Were it not for poetry being my first love and for my grandmothers devotion to me as a child, I often wonder if the realm of creativity which lives within me would ever have been discovered, nurtured and come, in turn, to be so deeply loved by myself and if not; what would be in its place I wonder?!

I grew up with books as my best friends. From a very young age I would look at books even before I could read. I have a vague recollection of putting together the story from pictures where I was unable to understand the meaning of words.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was able to read, I cherished books I received for Christmas, reading them over and over again, never tiring of Robinson Crusoe, Treasure Island and Kidnapped.
Factual books were also loved, books of Africa and animals, birds and wildlife, cars and fishing. I hungered for knowledge.
I expressed my thoughts and emotions by writing song lyrics and poetry but kept most of them to myself, afraid to share them.
As my own children grew I read them stories every night and we would read books together. I loved to make up stories and poems for them and I am sure they loved them too. As the years have progressed I now do this with my grandchildren.
I have started to write through my blogs in the hope that I may improve my art and someone out there may like and appreciate what I have to say.
I enjoy your art and your writing and thankyou for sharing it.
Thank you so much for such a fantastic comment. Stories are the passing on of so much aren't they?
ReplyDeleteThere are just so many responses which stories evoke in each of us and in a way which is truly unique and almost secretive to each person... that is true magic :D
I was a little sad this morning.
ReplyDeleteWhile searching for inspiration (I am a Graphic designer)on Winnie the Poo ilustrations, I found your blog, and saw the date on your human calendar :D you change my mood, thank you for making my day!
Gosh, you are so welcome! Thank you so much for taking the time to let me know, I really appreciate it :D
ReplyDeleteI love this post, it brings back so many childhood memories of having spent most of my time immersed in a fictional world so generously provided by all the fabulous authors out there: Brian Jacques, Willard Price, Gary Paulsen, JK Rowling, James Herriot, Gerald Durrell, Enid Blyton. I also love Winnie the Pooh and I've recently started to pick up copies of the Pooh stories when I see them. The original illustrations are definitely better :) I loved stories about animals far more than people when I was a child, fairy stories used to irritate me, all those princes and princesses were SO DULL.
ReplyDeleteYou have expressed your love of reading very eloquently, in particularly for poetry, which I also like very much :) I certainly didn't read Shakespeare at 13 though, would probably have found it far too difficult! ;)
Gosh, so sorry I took so long to reply. I don't believe I received notification of your comment.
ReplyDeleteThank you SO much for taking the time to comment, comments=love :D
I have a stash of Enid Blyton that could fill a library. Noddy was one of my childhood favourites, I even have some old 45rpm vinyls of Noddy songs from the 60's. Paddington also stole my heart and he still has it ... Gosh, so many wonderful, magical places to revisit.
Gerald Durrell and James Herriot are safely housed in my heart and bookshelves too. Along with Sheila Burnford and of course many others.
JK Rowling is brilliant, her writing really has raised a generation, in fact likely a few generations, from literary slumber. I am in awe of her in every aspect of her writing, skill and imagination.