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Injury Time

Page 7

by Clive James


  If even a few people remember a line or two in a poem you wrote, you’re not just getting there, you’re there. That’s it: and all the greater glory is mere vanity. When Raleigh bade farewell to the world’s vanities – honoured rags, glorious bubbles – he put his best efforts into the poem with which he did it, and which no audience might ever read; a poem he crafted as if he were starting his life again, and had never fought the Spanish armada, or sailed to America, or dodged for his life when the Queen fell for him. Seamus Heaney faithfully tending his creative writing classes at Harvard, and Philip Larkin stacking shelves in his library at Hull, were both trying to tell you something: even if the blaze of poetic glory descends on you, somewhere in the middle of it you should maintain the realisation that your status as a poet is a side issue. Nothing matters except your new poem. Is the thing that demanded to be written demanding to be read aloud? Does it make your mouth move when you read? You might feel childish if it does, but try to remember that this whole misbegotten adventure began when you were very young and said something clever. It made you famous in your family, which should be fame enough while you get on with the business of saying something clever again.

  It’s the task you were born to, or you think you were; and if it turns out that you were wrong, there are hundreds of other tasks that are poetic too, or can be made so if attended to with sufficient care and style. Your sense of dedication is one of the best things about you, so if you can’t use it doing this, use it doing something else – just as long as you get enough spare time to go on reading poetry, the second best thing after writing it, as I’m sure you agree.

  Cambridge, 2017

  ‘A worthy successor to his 2015 collection, Sentenced to Life . . . Injury Time, on the whole, reminds us that James is, and has always been, a poet of clarity and control. His mastery of metre and rhyme is indisputable . . . Some of the more personal ones about his looming-but-deferred death have so much in common with the tone and diction of late poems by John Donne that it can seem as if the intervening four centuries had never happened . . . If Injury Time proves to be James’s last collection (as it well may not) it will be a more than memorable testament to have left behind’

  Sydney Morning Herald

  ‘James has always been a fine poet with a considerable mastery of traditional forms as well as a marked capacity for the elegiac . . . Injury Time is a significant achievement and lasting testament to a man who is a marvel of a wordsmith and who in the face of a death sentence that has allowed him injury time has written some of his best poems . . . this is a book by a true artist. It will ring in the ears and tug at the heart of any reader’

  Peter Craven, The Australian

  ‘Injury Time heads the latest/last collection of his poems, which are rightly heralded as “a major literary event”. Though the title’s sporting metaphor is characteristic, it has very little to do with “sport”. The poems are as widely ranging and inventive as ever, both in their form and their content. They range daringly from a splendidly substantial celebration of the deaf Beethoven to various self-revealing meditations on his own carcinoma. The latter can be admired at full strength in “Night-Walkers Song”, but his playful wit and imagination are as ever wonderfully varied’

  Katherine Duncan-Jones, Times Literary Supplement, Books of the Year 2017

  Injury Time

  CLIVE JAMES is the multi-million-copy bestselling author of more than forty books. His poetry collection Sentenced to Life and his translation of Dante’s The Divine Comedy were both Sunday Times top ten bestsellers, and his collections of verse have been shortlisted for many prizes. In 2012 he was appointed CBE and in 2013 an Officer of the Order of Australia.

  ALSO BY CLIVE JAMES

  AUTOBIOGRAPHY

  Unreliable Memoirs Falling Towards England

  May Week Was In June North Face of Soho

  The Blaze of Obscurity

  FICTION

  Brilliant Creatures The Remake

  Brrm! Brrm! The Silver Castle

  VERSE

  Other Passports: Poems 1958–1985

  The Book of My Enemy: Collected Verse 1958–2003

  Opal Sunset: Selected Poems 1958–2008

  Angels Over Elsinore: Collected Verse 2003–2008

  Nefertiti in the Flak Tower Sentenced to Life

  Collected Poems 1958–2015 Gate of Lilacs The River in the Sky

  TRANSLATION

  The Divine Comedy

  CRITICISM

  The Metropolitan Critic (new edition, 1994)

  Visions Before Midnight The Crystal Bucket

  First Reactions (US) From the Land of Shadows

  Glued to the Box Snakecharmers in Texas

  The Dreaming Swimmer Fame in the 20th Century

  On Television Even As We Speak Reliable Essays

  As of This Writing (US) The Meaning of Recognition

  Cultural Amnesia The Revolt of the Pendulum

  A Point of View Poetry Notebook

  Latest Readings Play All

  TRAVEL

  Flying Visits

  First published 2017 by Picador

  This electronic edition published 2018 by Picador

  an imprint of Pan Macmillan

  20 New Wharf Road, London N1 9RR

  Associated companies throughout the world

  www.panmacmillan.com

  ISBN 978-1-5098-5299-4

  Copyright © Clive James 2017

  Cover Design by Stuart Wilson, Picador Art Department

  Cover images © Shutterstock, Hayden Verry @ Arcangel Images and Duncan Shaw @ Getty Images

  The right of Clive James to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  Pan Macmillan does not have any control over, or any responsibility for, any author or third-party websites referred to in or on this book.

  You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

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