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Make Duffy poet laureate because she's openly gay, says Morgan

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Published Date: 28 April 2009
SCOTLAND'S "Makar" Edwin Morgan backed Carol Ann Duffy as a future poet laureate yesterday because she is an openly gay woman.
Morgan, frail and wheelchair-bound but clearly speaking his mind on his 89th birthday, called Glasgow-born Duffy a fine writer who would bring "some fireworks" to the job.

"She's a good writer and she would be the first woman laureate; it would b
e good to encourage that," he said, as an archive devoted to his work was inaugurated yesterday.

"Because she's openly gay, some people wouldn't like that at all. I think she ought to take it just for that reason."

The current poet laureate, Andrew Motion, steps down this week after ten years and reports at the weekend suggested Duffy would be asked to succeed him.

Duffy was a favourite for poet laureate before Motion was named in 1999, but it is thought that then prime minister Tony Blair felt her sexuality made her too controversial for the royal appointment.

If appointed, she would be the first Scot and the first woman to become poet laureate since the the role was created in 1670.

Duffy was in Ireland yesterday, and there was no official confirmation that she had been offered or accepted the post.

Morgan was named Scotland's Makar, or national poet, in 2004. He arrived at the Scottish Poetry Library in Edinburgh by taxi from a Glasgow care home yesterday for the opening of the new Edwin Morgan Archive.

The occasion brought an outpouring of affection for the man regarded as a national cultural treasure.

Edinburgh's own Makar, the poet Ron Butlin, cut a chocolate birthday cake inscribed with the first three lines of Morgan's poem, The Computer's First Birthday Card. Imagining a birthday message written by a computer, it read: "Many returns happy/ Many turns happier/ happy turns remain."

The poet and playwright Liz Lochhead, the Glasgow Makar, recalled how reading Morgan's work for the opening of the Scottish Parliament was her "toughest gig ever". She read his poem A View of Things.

Culture Minister Michael Russell told him:

"What you have done over the years has meant a great deal to me. We were reading a poem not because it was part of a course but because it spoke to every single one of us."

The contents of the archive, from the collection of the poet's friend and publisher Hamish Whyte, range from rare first editions and pamphlets to audio- visual records of interviews and readings. It includes his desk, chair, and a bottle of absinthe he entertained visitors with.

Morgan said: "An archive has tended to be in the past once you're dead. I'm not dead yet, but it's a nice idea.

"People can see an introduction to your poetry and it involves voice, music, song.

"I'm afraid I introduced some younger fellows to absinthe. It's very bad."

Asked who should be considered as laureate, Morgan said: "Lots of poets are writing very well, some are very good but not popular. Like Jeremy Prynne. He's a difficult poet, he writes many different types of poetry." Prynne is regarded as one of England's most important poets, but has been famously obscure.

"Prynne is trying to keep the language going, with interesting and surprising things," Morgan said. "He won't get it, he's too difficult, it wouldn't be popular."

Morgan, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer several years ago, said the most recent poetry he had read were two volumes given to him by a carer in the nursing home, classics by Ezra Pound and Emily Dickinson.

He noted that in the past Duffy had drawn the line at royal weddings. She said several years ago: "I will not write a poem for Edward and Sophie. No self- respecting poet should have to."





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  • Last Updated: 28 April 2009 12:34 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Alec M,

Falkirk 28/04/2009 01:32:59
Quote "I will not write a poem for Edward and Sophie. No self-respecting poet should have to."

Hmm. Isn't that the purpose of the appointment - to glorify "royalty"?
2

Denis J Anatty,

28/04/2009 03:26:35
Let she be the poet laureate as the first Scot and the first woman to decorate that post not as an openly gay woman.
3

Mercutio,

FALKIRK 28/04/2009 03:34:10
#2 None of the above qualifications are paticularly valid.
4

common sense voice,

28/04/2009 04:40:13
the old duffer probably just thinks she's happy (cropped hair, mens clothes and f!sting never came into his head)
5

Boy Wonder,

28/04/2009 08:53:44
Poet Laureate.

A post that should be consigned to the dusty past with the monarchy!

Personally, I thought every Poet who has been Laureate since the post was created by Charles II, has fallen short of the mark.

As a fan of the great William Topaz McGonagall, there's been not one of them good enough to shine his shoes!

A'll mak' a motion
Naw ... no' yin o' thame
The ither yin that tells o' fame
Fur a' o' thame in the ha's o' time
That kin string twa wurds an' mak' them rhyme
Ah think we'll a' be mair than huffy
If the Laureate post goes tae bliddy Duffy
Fur the post shud gang tae yin that cares
That wizard o' wurds ...
The great Pam Ayres!!!
6

Horrible Cankers @Cyber Shebeen,

28/04/2009 09:42:15
I think old Mr Morgan was probably being tongue in cheek when he said she should be Poet Laureate because of her sexuality..

Why was Ivor Cutler never Poet bliddy Laureate?
7

Allan(handofgod137),

28/04/2009 11:27:52
Why waste public money employing poets in the first place?
8

Tartan Viking,

28/04/2009 11:45:27
"Make Duffy poet laureate because she's openly gay, says Morgan"

"Shut up Morgan", says fed up public.
9

SandyBottoms,

Edinburgh 28/04/2009 11:45:57
Sounds like affirmative action to me.

She/he should get xxx because they are black, female, gay, Scottish, fond of polka dots -- this sort of thinking only serves to keep these minorities in the gutter they've been living in their whole lives.

Ooh, poor black, woman, Scottish, gay, polka dot person, we've got to help you out. There ya go, don't you all feel better now that we've reduced all your achievements down to a stereotype?
10

OhIdoliketobe,

the seaside 28/04/2009 12:24:57
I read that headline and thought that talentless young Welsh singer had ingratiated herself to Scotland and taken up writing poetry....
11

uno.who,

Livingston 28/04/2009 12:31:00
#12 .... so, "Warwick Avenue" doesn't cut it for you then ? :-)

12

danbob,

28/04/2009 13:19:47
Good old Bill Wordsworth would be turning in his grave.
13

FLUB,

a rocky outcrop in eastern central Scotland 28/04/2009 15:11:59
AAH, the world of the 'gay' poets - a very tight circle!
14

Brodric,

28/04/2009 18:25:52
He didn't say she should be laureate because she is gay. He said it was precisely because people wouldn't like it that she should definitely take it.

And he is right. Why should she not be laureate just because some people might think her too controversial.

15

Lucian,

Kent, England, U.K. 29/04/2009 08:48:10
I think it is unlikely that they will chose a poet for the position who has said "I will not write a poem for Edward and Sophie. No self- respecting poet should have to." and has written poems with lines like "We do not need aMonarch:/the unemployed are sick..." I think it is more likely they will chose a poet who appreciates the Royal Family.

 

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