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    Green Glass Beads


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      Contents

      Foreword by Jacqueline Wilson

      Friends

      Me & You Mandy Coe

      Tunbridge Wells Fleur Adcock

      Friends Elizabeth Jennings

      Sporty People Wendy Cope

      Prior Knowledge Carol Ann Duffy

      Sassenachs Jackie Kay

      It Is a Puzzle Allan Ahlberg

      Summer Romance Jackie Kay

      I’m Nobody! Who Are You? Emily Dickinson

      Family

      Sleep, Baby, Sleep Anon.

      New Baby Jackie Kay

      My Baby Brother’s Secrets John Foster

      Balloons Sylvia Plath

      Sister in a Whale Julie O’Callaghan

      Human Affection Stevie Smith

      The Housemaid’s Letter Clare Bevan

      Sidcup, 1940 Fleur Adcock

      Sensing Mother Mandy Coe

      Daddy Fell into the Pond Alfred Noyes

      Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers Adrienne Rich

      Uncle Edward’s Affliction Vernon Scannell

      Grandmamma’s Birthday Hilaire Belloc

      Indifference Harry Graham

      Your Grandmother Carol Ann Duffy

      Rooty Tooty Carol Ann Duffy

      Grandpa’s Soup Jackie Kay

      Nymphs, Mermaids, Fairies, Witches – and One Giantess

      Overheard on a Saltmarsh Harold Monro

      from Prothalamion Edmund Spenser

      Sabrina Fair John Milton

      The Mermaid Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      The Merman Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      Wish Mandy Coe

      The Girl Who Could See Fairies Marian Swinger

      The Spider Clare Bevan

      A Fairy Went a-Marketing Rose Fyleman

      The Fairy’s Song William Shakespeare

      The Fairies William Allingham

      Thrice Toss These Oaken Ashes in the Air Thomas Campion

      The Old Witch in the Copse Frances Cornford

      Fire, Burn; and Cauldron, Bubble William Shakespeare

      The Giantess Carol Ann Duffy

      Clothes

      My Sari Debjani Chatterjee

      My Hat Stevie Smith

      Purple Shoes Irene Rawnsley

      Red Boots On Kit Wright

      Warning Jenny Joseph

      Birds and Animals

      The Prayer of the Little Ducks Carmen Bernos de Gasztold, translated from the French by Rumer Godden

      A Melancholy Lay Marjory Fleming

      The Swallow Christina Rossetti

      The Owl and the Pussy-Cat Edward Lear

      The Frog Who Dreamed She Was an Opera Singer Jackie Kay

      The Singing Cat Stevie Smith

      The Song of the Jellicles T. S. Eliot

      The Cat and the Moon W. B. Yeats

      My Cat Jeoffry Christopher Smart

      The Tyger William Blake

      A Sonnet on a Monkey Marjory Fleming

      The Cow Robert Louis Stevenson

      Cow Ted Hughes

      The Blessing James Wright

      A Small Dragon Brian Patten

      Toy Dog Carol Ann Duffy

      A Garden of Bears U. A. Fanthorpe

      Animals Sharon Thesen

      School

      Halfway Street, Sidcup Fleur Adcock

      St Gertrude’s, Sidcup Fleur Adcock

      A Poetry on Geometry Ruhee Parelkar

      Inside Sir’s Matchbox John Foster

      Dream Team Frances Nagle

      Make It Bigger, Eileen! Joseph Coelho

      The New Girl Clare Bevan

      Mrs Mackenzie Gillian Floyd

      The Day After Wes Magee

      Squirrels and Motorbikes David Whitehead

      The Fairy School under the Loch John Rice

      We Lost Our Teacher to the Sea David Harmer

      Ms Fleur Mary Green

      Changed Dave Calder

      Teacher Carol Ann Duffy

      St Judas Welcomes Author Philip Arder Philip Ardagh

      Birth and Death

      You’re Sylvia Plath

      Morning Song Sylvia Plath

      Drury Goodbyes Fleur Adcock

      Not Waving but Drowning Stevie Smith

      Song Christina Rossetti

      Remember Christina Rossetti

      Fidele’s Dirge William Shakespeare

      Stop All the Clocks, W. H. Auden

      Break, Break, Break Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      Ariel’s Song William Shakespeare

      The Stranger Walter de la Mare

      Children

      A Song about Myself John Keats

      What Are Little Girls . . . Adrian Henri

      The Boy Actor Noel Coward

      The Adventures of Isabel Ogden Nash

      maggie and milly and molly and may E. E. Cummings

      Equestrienne Rachel Field

      Brendon Gallacher Jackie Kay

      If No One Ever Marries Me Laurence Alma-Tadema

      Colouring In Jan Dean

      Amanda! Robin Klein

      Halo Carol Ann Duffy

      Good Girls Irene Rawnsley

      Women

      Minnie and Winnie Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      Tarantella Hilaire Belloc

      Unwilling Country Life Alexander Pope

      Annabel-Emily Charles Causley

      The Ice Wilfrid Gibson

      The History of Sixteen Wonderful Old Women Anon.

      Love

      The Janitor’s Boy Nathalia Crane

      Romance Robert Louis Stevenson

      Expecting Visitors Jenny Joseph

      The Twelve Days of Christmas Anon.

      Dear True Love U. A. Fanthorpe

      Indoor Games near Newbury John Betjeman

      A Birthday Christina Rossetti

      from The Princess Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      The Passionate Shepherd to His Love Christopher Marlowe

      Love You More James Carter

      How Do I Love Thee? Elizabeth Barrett Browning

      Sally in our Alley Henry Carey

      Renouncement Alice Meynell

      A Quoi Bon Dire Charlotte Mew

      As I Walked Out One Evening W. H. Auden

      Sonnet 18 William Shakespeare

      Stories

      La Belle Dame Sans Merci John Keats

      The Song of Wandering Aengus W. B. Yeats

      The Jumblies Edward Lear

      On St Catherine’s Day Charles Causley

      The Lady of Shalott Alfred, Lord Tennyson

      Fruit and Flowers

      This Is Just to Say William Carlos Williams

      from The Old Wives’ Tale George Peele

      Given an Apple Elizabeth Jennings

      Moonlit Apples John Drinkwater

      Millions of Strawberries Genevieve Taggard

      from Goblin Market Christina Rossetti

      What Is Pink? Christina Rossetti

      Time of Roses Thomas Hood

      Lilies Are White Anon.

      Daffodils William Wordsworth

      Foxgloves Ted Hughes

      Spring Song William Shakespeare

      Loveliest of Trees A. E. Housman

      Time Mary Ursula Bethell

      Places

      I Remember, I Remember Thomas Hood

      Cottage Eleanor Farjeon

      The Lake Isle of Innisfree W. B. Yeats

      The Way through the Woods Rudyard Kipling

      Adlestrop Edward Thomas

      The Counties Carol Ann Duffy

      Rainbows, Moons and Stars

      Spell to Bring a Smile John Agard

      My Heart Leaps Up William Wordsworth

      Above the Dock T. E. Hulme

      Lemon Moon Beverly McLoughland

      The Moon Landing James Carter

      Where Am I? Wendy Cope

      The Heavenly City Stevie Smith

      The More Loving One W. H. Auden

    &nb
    sp; When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer Walt Whitman

      Index of First Lines

      Index of Poets

      Acknowledgements

      Foreword

      There was a craze for children’s talent competitions when I was a little girl. My mum was very keen for me to take part, though I was an agonizingly shy child, who simply wanted to curl up in an armchair and read a book. I didn’t possess any obvious talents. I couldn’t sing in tune. I couldn’t manage so much as ‘Chopsticks’ on the piano. I had never had ballet or tap lessons so I couldn’t dance. However, as I said, I loved reading, so I was given a poetry book, encouraged to learn a long poem, and then told to recite it on stage. I was taught to speak slowly and clearly and do appropriate gestures, while wearing my party frock. A shiver of horror runs through me now at the very thought. However, the one wondrous thing about this terrible ordeal was that I learned many poems. Some of them I’d sooner forget. They weren’t poems at all; they were twee rhymes. I was encouraged to lisp dreadful verses, like:

      I’m sitting on the doorstep

      And I’m eating bread and jam

      And I isn’t crying really

      Though it feels as if I am.

      Things perked up a little when I was given an A. A. Milne collection, though I still try hard to block out the memory of reciting ‘The King’s Breakfast’ at the end of Clacton Pier when I’d drunk several glasses of water and then was too shy to tell the talent-contest manager I was desperate to go to the loo.

      Somehow my mum still felt I needed to be encouraged, and she sent me to elocution lessons. Suddenly I found myself learning real poems, taught by a retired teacher with a passion for Shakespeare. I learned chunks of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and As You Like It when I was seven or so. I doubt I understood one word in ten, but I loved the sound of the language, the rhythm of the lines, the singing of the words inside my head. I realized you didn’t always have to know precisely what was going on to like a poem.

      I’ve included several Shakespeare poems in this anthology, and some quite challenging poetry – but don’t worry if you can’t always understand everything straight away. Sometimes you have to read a poem many times to tease out every single meaning. But there are lots and lots of fun, easy poems too that you can gulp down happily in one bite. In fact, I like to think this anthology is like a very good restaurant. It’s got a very large menu, and every dish is carefully prepared and presented as beautifully as possible. You’ll hopefully love some things, like many, and maybe wrinkle your nose at a few.

      The joy for me is that it’s my anthology, and I love every single poem in this book. I think my favourite is probably ‘Overheard on a Saltmarsh’ by Harold Monro. I first heard it at school in Year Four. Up till then I’d thought most poems had to have a particular pattern, mostly verses of four lines. I didn’t know you could have a poem that was a conversation between two people – and interesting magical people at that, a nymph and a goblin. The nymph has some green glass beads, and the goblin desperately wants them. I totally understood. I’ve always loved jewellery (I’m the woman who often wears a ring on every finger and has bangles clanking all the way up her arm). I saw those green glass beads glittering in my mind’s eye. I ached to possess them too. I muttered green glass beads on my way to school, as if they were a magic spell.

      I like magical poems and there are plenty in this book, including several that really are magic spells. I love poems about mermaids and fairies and witches – and I’ve included a wonderfully strange poem about a giantess by one of my favourite modern writers, the Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy. There are lots of women poets in this book because this is a special anthology for girls – but many male poets are included too.

      There are also three child poets. Ruhee Parelkar wrote a poem about geometry when she was six, Nathalia Crane wrote a love poem about the janitor’s boy when she was nine and I’ve included two poems by the wondrous little Marjory Fleming, who wrote fantastic but sometimes unintentionally funny poetry in the early nineteenth century, when she was very little. I especially like her ‘Sonnet on a Monkey’, which starts:

      O lovely O most charming pug

      Thy graceful air and heavenly mug

      And finishes:

      His noses cast is of the roman

      He is a very pretty weoman

      I could not get a rhyme for roman

      And was obliged to call it weoman.

      I think we’ve all had that trouble, trying to write a poem. I’m not very good at writing poems myself, though I wrote a great many when I was a teenager. But there are some poems that I feel I might have written, if only I had talent enough. One poem that really speaks to me – and to millions of others – is ‘Warning’ by Jenny Joseph, with its famous starting lines: ‘When I am an old woman I shall wear purple/With a red hat.’

      It has inspired special shops that only sell purple items and a society for ladies of a certain age who visit art galleries and museums and theatres wearing purple with outrageous red hats. I was once lucky enough to meet Jenny Joseph in a bookshop, and I couldn’t help being a little disappointed to see that though she is an old woman now she was dressed in elegant tasteful beige.

      The ‘Clothes’ section of this anthology is a short but special one – the longest sections are ‘Family’ and ‘Birds and Animals’. I’ve tried to choose a great variety of creatures, both real and imaginary – but there are six cat poems. I’m sorry, I just love cats. I have two: Jacob, who is grey and white and utterly gorgeous, and Thomas, who is black and slinky with enormous green eyes.

      There are some very short poems and also a couple of very long poems. My English teacher at secondary school, Miss Pierce, read us the whole of ‘The Lady of Shalott’ and I was utterly enchanted and set about learning it by heart (though I can only manage a couple of verses now). I found ‘Goblin Market’ in a little crimson leather-bound book in my grandma’s cupboard, tucked behind her sewing basket and her box of toffees. I loved this weird story of the goblins and their fruit, and clearly so did she, because when she was dying she asked if it could be buried with her. But she had a mysterious little smile on her face. She didn’t usually like poetry at all, so perhaps the little book had been given to her by a long-ago sweetheart.

      There’s a satisfyingly thick section of love poetry in the anthology. That’s the wonderful thing about poetry – you can nearly always find a poem to chime with a particular mood. If you’re feeling very sad and sorry for yourself, it’s just the time to read melancholy poems. If you’re feeling fond of your friends and family, there are selections to make you smile. If you’re fed up with your baby brother yelling or your mum nagging at you, then you’ll find poems that echo your feelings. If you’re feeling very lonely, then Emily Dickinson will be comforting.

      I’ve tried hard to include some funny poems too. I think my favourite funny poem is Philip Ardagh’s piece about a dreadful school visit. I guarantee it will make any children’s author shriek with laughter. Teachers come in all shapes and sizes, as I’ve shown in my ‘School’ section. I do hope you have a teacher who really loves poetry and chats to you about it and reads it aloud beautifully (not in a special strange sing-song voice). If so, you’ll probably love poetry too. But if not, and you think most poetry is silly rubbish that you can’t understand, please give the poems in the book a chance. Maybe try reading them aloud to yourself. They’re all my special favourites, but they won’t necessarily be yours too. Read as many anthologies as you can – and then maybe write and tell me your favourites.

      Jacqueline Wilson

      FRIENDS

      Me & You

      The long-legged girl who takes goal-kicks

      is me,

      I loop my ‘j’ and ‘g’s.

      twiddle my hair

      and wobbled a loose tooth

      through History all yesterday afternoon.

      The small shy boy who draws dragons

      is you.

      You can multiply,

      make d
    elicious cheese scones

      and when my tooth finally

      falls out and I cry in surprise,

      you hand me a crumpled tissue.

      I will be an Olympic athlete,

      Win two bronze medals.

      You will be a vet with gentle hands

      Who gets cats to purr and budgies speak.

      We don’t know this yet

      but we will be each other’s first date.

      One kiss.

      That’s all . . . but

      for the rest of our lives we never, ever forget.

      In the meantime,

      my tongue explores the toothless gap

      and you lean over your desk and concentrate

      on drawing the feathery,

      feathery lines of a dragon’s wings.

      Mandy Coe

      Tunbridge Wells

      My turn for Audrey Pomegranate,

      all-purpose friend for newcomers;

      the rest had had enough of her –

      her too-much hair, her too-much flesh,

      her moles, her sideways-gliding mouth,

      her smirking knowledge about rabbits.

      Better a gluey friend than none,

      and who was I to pick and choose?

      She nearly stuck; but just in time

      I met a girl called Mary Button,

      a neat Dutch doll as clean as soap,

      and Audrey P. was back on offer.

      Fleur Adcock

      Friends

      I fear it’s very wrong of me

      And yet I must admit,

      When someone offers friendship

      I want the whole of it.

      I don’t want everybody else

      To share my friends with me.

      At least, I want one special one,

      Who indisputedly,

      Likes me much more than all the rest,

      Who’s always on my side,

      Who never cares what others say,

      Who lets me come and hide

      Within his shadow; in his house –

      It doesn’t matter where –

      Who lets me simply be myself,

      Who’s always, always there.

      Elizabeth Jennings

      Sporty People

      I took her for my kind of person

      And it was something of a shock

      When my new friend revealed

      That, once upon a time,

     

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