Poetry and Hope evening at The Lamb, 30 September at 7

Poetry and Hope evening at The Lamb

READING POEMS BY PUBLISHED POETS AND TALKING ABOUT THEIR UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT HOPE IS AND CAN BE

For George Herbert, hope is an anchor and for Emily Dickinson a thing with feathers. But the painter G F Watts had other ideas: he pictured it (above) as a she, blind or at least blindfolded, sitting in apparent comfort on top of the world and trying to hear what music the single surviving string of her broken lyre could play to her and anyone listening. The enigma is telling.

Some of the poets featured in our evening leave us in no doubt as to how they see hope. Others share Watts’s sense of it as a mystery. Quite which is which we will  discover in poems by America’s Dickinson, Emerson and Wylie; Nobel Laureates Heaney, Neruda and Szymborska;  Wales’s former National Poet Gillian Clarke, Herbert, Shakespeare, Tennyson, Patrick Creagh, and a single verse from Fitzgerald’s Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.

These sessions are always focussed and informal. Everyone can feel free to express their thoughts and feelings about the poems as they want to. A lot of ground gets covered, poems and readers come alive, and friends are quickly made of the poets and each other. 

"Wonderful and thought-provoking".
Romee Tilanus
after Poetry and Hope in Hertford, July 2025
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Top picture: ground floor of The Lamb (built in the 1720s), 94 Lamb’s Conduit Street, Bloomsbury, London

Second to Top picture: George Frederick Watts and assistants, Hope (1886), Tate Britain, London  

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