The Herald

POEM OF THE DAY

- WITH LESLEY DUNCAN

A second sample from Gerda Stevenson’s Quines, poems in tribute to women of Scotland (Luath Press, £9.99).

TESSA THINKS THE SCOTTISH

POETRY LIBRARY

Tessa Ransford, OBE, born Mumbai, 1938, died Edinburgh, 2015; poet, editor, translator, activist, and founder of the Scottish Poetry Library, the only – as far as is known – purpose-built, independen­t public poetry library in the world.

I didn’t exist, till, at Festival time, a visitor to the capital asked her where I was, and in that one beat, her thought created me, the future now:

a space for poetry and people to tryst on three foundation stones of language –

Gaelic, Scots and English, a glimmer of syllables signalled from spines, bound sheaves murmuring distillati­ons, an infinite exchange of the world’s flickering lexicons, bearing light from centuries’ vaults, outward and home again, thumbed, leafed and loved, crossferti­lised, the way she’d learned from her Scottish-indian roots, whose shoots branched across horizons into the future now.

Poetry goes through walls, she wrote, and took that thought to the road, driving our bus from home base, my store to be shared, poems fluttering like flags all along the hairpin bends of Scotland’s rugged map, always reaching, reaching out, into the future now.

NB: Future Now and Poetry Goes through Walls are poems by Tessa

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