Rob Hindle on William Blake’s ’The Sick Rose’ and his own poem ’The Sick Rose’ episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 30, 2023 · 42 MIN

Rob Hindle on William Blake’s ’The Sick Rose’ and his own poem ’The Sick Rose’

from The Two-Way Poetry Podcast · host Chris Jones

In this episode, poet Rob Hindle discusses William Blake's 'The Sick Rose' and how reading this work influenced the writing of his own poem 'The Sick Rose'.  In the interview, Rob reflects on Blake's political convictions, and touches on psychoanalytical readings of Blake as a means of understanding the original poem. He goes on to reflect on what his own position is regarding poetry and the world, poetic form, and how his poem fits into the collection Sapo as a whole. Rob Hindle's poetry has appeared in books and pamphlets since 2006. His first, Some Histories of the Sheffield Flood 1864, won the inaugural Templar Poetry Pamphlet Competition, and was followed by Neurosurgery in Iraq, his first full collection (Templar, 2008). An extended sequence, The Purging of Spence Broughton, was published by Longbarrow Press in 2009, marking the beginning of a fruitful relationship which has seen the publication of two further collections - The Grail Roads (2018), shortlisted in the Forward Prizes, and Sapo (2022), in which 'The Sick Rose' appears. In 2013, Yoke and Arrows was published by Smokestack. You can read a text version of William Blake's (1757-1827) 'The Sick Rose' (with modernized punctuation) here: The Sick Rose (text version).  You can read another version - with accompanying images - here: The Sick Rose (text and image). You can find out more about Sapo, and buy copies here on The Longbarrow Press website: Sapo (Longbarrow Press)   'The Sick Rose' by Rob Hindle (from the sequence Songs of Experience & of Innocence) Up in the night I creak my way to the bathroom. The sky has wheeled its stars round; where the moon was a faint smear of orange burns on the moor line.   The cat flap snaps. Ours jumps from her sleep. A black shape wanders down to the gate, job done. Back in bed I picture a plane stalling over Sheffield,   ploughing into the moor, a brief flare, thunder. I see the tom cat crossing the abandoned street, unhurried and undeterred. The rest is sweat, imagined steps on the stairs.        

In this episode, poet Rob Hindle discusses William Blake's 'The Sick Rose' and how reading this work influenced the writing of his own poem 'The Sick Rose'.  In the interview, Rob reflects on Blake's political convictions, and touches on psychoanalytical readings of Blake as a means of understanding the original poem. He goes on to reflect on what his own position is regarding poetry and the world, poetic form, and how his poem fits into the collection Sapo as a whole.Rob Hindle's poetry has appeared in books and pamphlets since 2006. His first, Some Histories of the Sheffield Flood 1864, won the inaugural Templar Poetry Pamphlet Competition, and was followed by Neurosurgery in Iraq, his first full collection (Templar, 2008). An extended sequence, The Purging of Spence Broughton, was published by Longbarrow Press in 2009, marking the beginning of a fruitful relationship which has seen the publication of two further collections - The Grail Roads (2018), shortlisted in the Forward Prizes, and Sapo (2022), in which 'The Sick Rose' appears. In 2013, Yoke and Arrows was published by Smokestack. You can read a text version of William Blake's (1757-1827) 'The Sick Rose' (with modernized punctuation) here: The Sick Rose (text version).  You can read another version - with accompanying images - here: The Sick Rose (text and image). You can find out more about Sapo, and buy copies here on The Longbarrow Press website: Sapo (Longbarrow Press)   'The Sick Rose' by Rob Hindle(from the sequence Songs of Experience & of Innocence)Up in the night I creak my way to the bathroom.The sky has wheeled its stars round; where the moon wasa faint smear of orange burns on the moor line.   The cat flap snaps. Ours jumps from her sleep.A black shape wanders down to the gate, job done. Back in bed I picture a plane stalling over Sheffield,   ploughing into the moor, a brief flare, thunder. I see the tom cat crossing the abandoned street, unhurried and undeterred. The rest is sweat, imagined steps on the stairs.

NOW PLAYING

Rob Hindle on William Blake’s ’The Sick Rose’ and his own poem ’The Sick Rose’

0:00 42:04

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The Two-Way Poetry Podcast?

This episode is 42 minutes long.

When was this The Two-Way Poetry Podcast episode published?

This episode was published on October 30, 2023.

What is this episode about?

In this episode, poet Rob Hindle discusses William Blake's 'The Sick Rose' and how reading this work influenced the writing of his own poem 'The Sick Rose'.  In the interview, Rob reflects on Blake's political convictions, and touches on...

Can I download this The Two-Way Poetry Podcast episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!