TEXT E The first school I went to
was a red-brick building on the edge of the town, in the district of Georgetown.
We had a splendid teacher and he taught us, about sixty small boys, for the four
years I was in the school, between the ages of seven and eleven. He was not only
fond of words himself, but he could use them to tell jokes, to sing aloud, to
explain things so vividly to us that we could see, almost, what he described.
And he educated our senses, too, he made us look at everything so firmly, to
know the textures of things with our skins, to hear the particular noises that
exist in the world all around us. So real were our experiences that we
began to look for the words necessary to recreate those experiences. That is how
I began to write poetry. I can’t say that poetry was flay
greatest enthusiasm at that time. I loved football most of all, and after that
boxing. I would travel miles just to kick a football. I knew all the great
boxers of our town. When I was about ten years old I saw the fight I wrote about
in The Ballad of Billy Rose. And years later, in Bristol, I saw the same man,
old now, and very frail. His name, however, was really Tommy Rose, and in the
first version of my poem I called him that. When I finished it, I read it aloud,
and I knew that something was wrong. I was forced to change it to Billy, so that
the balance was right, so that there was a satisfying correspondence between the
word "ballad" and the word "Billy". Much the same thing happened when I
wrote about his last great fight. I wanted my readers to hear for themselves the
sounds of the fight, and how the words which end in "s" are really the shoes of
the boxers as they slither on the resin. What I’m saying is that in my poems I
try not so much to describe things as actually to make them, with
words. My friend Ted Walker, a very fine poet himself, and I,
used to set each other weekly poetry writing challenges, he choosing a title one
week and I the next. In this way I came to write Gardening Gloves. The
poem is an example of how necessary it is for the poet to observe well, so that
an old pair of gloves can reveal all that there is to know about them, and for
imagination to begin to build a little world around them. Poetry
is a craft as well as an art. We owe very great responsibility to the poem; if
we do not write well enough the poem fails. Like any other craft, although some
people are more naturally gifted than others, we can all learn the skills. I
learned by reading the work of other poets. I read everything, good poems, bad
poems, learning as I read. I was very fond of funny poems, and that was valuable
for me since, to be successful, funny poems have to be extremely well made. But
as I grew more experienced and severe, as my taste developed, I needed better
examples. I found them in the work of Edward Thomas, a poet who was killed in
the First World War. From him I learned how to write quietly and simply,
without, I hope, losing any strength or true complexity of thought I might
possess. A Glass Window is in part my tribute to this man, dead years before I
was born, who, among many others, taught me what poetry can be, how to listen to
it. How to write it. From the passage we can gather that the author’s approach to poetry ______.
A.has changed to reflect the times in which he has lived B.has benefited from the reactions of others to his work C.is still in tune with what he was taught at school D.is heavily influenced by the landscape where he grew up