The Scotsman

COLIN BRAMWELL

- DAVID POLLOCK

“When I’m performing, I always pick poems that I can remember,” says poet Colin Bramwell of the prosaic (partial) reason why he’s chosen the two works “The Lost Elephant” and “Hellespont” for his Scotsman Session. “I don’t want to have a book in the way, or anything that’s like a barrier between me and the audience. It’s almost like a test of a poem, whether you can remember it… if you can’t remember your own work, how can you expect anyone else to?”

Based on the black isle, bram well describes what he does as “between poetry and performanc­e.” “I write in Scots and English,” says Bramwell, the runner-up in last year’s Edwin Morgan Prize. “It’s Scots with a Highland inflection, although I was born in Ayrshire, so there’s probably a bit of west coast there as well. I’ve lived in Edinburgh for quite a while too, so I worry my accent’s becoming too neutral.” He also translates poems into English; from Taiwan and Hong Kong for his PHD, from Latin America for his own enjoyment.

“I’ m trying to be multilingu­al ,” he laughs, when asked if google Translate is his friend. “There’s sometimes this thing about Scots, where people treat it like you’ve either got it or you don’t, but i think once you start saying ‘this is a language’ and treating it like one, then it becomes legitimate to try and learn. My Spanishisn’ t great, but my wife’ s from Mexico so it’s improving.”

These poems are taken from his new pamphlet, The Highland Citizenshi­p Test. “The first is called The Lost Elephant, which is in the form of avil lane l le ,” he says .“it’ s about moving from Ayrshire to the Black

Isle and my childhood toy that I lost then. The second is a poem of unrequited love from one side of the Bosporus to the other, from the European side to the Asian side – the map (of Istanbul) looks like two hands stretching­out for each other. so yes, a poem of unrequited love, or perhaps a problemati­c flirtation.”

The Highland Citizenshi­p Test, by Colin Bramwell is out now, published by Stewed Rhubarb, www. colinbramw­ell.com.

 ??  ?? 0 Colin Bramwell
0 Colin Bramwell

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom