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Too Late To Be A Hero

Michael Kilby

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (5x8)9781425960025 $ 8.30  
About the Book

These poems were almost all written for emotional reasons and are all to some extent "confessional". Most poems are. But truth is only a starting point, the finished poem describing an experience, not an event.

Some of these poems were written in other eras, when life seemed simpler. I have tried to resist the urge to change them, not always successfully. But, as Peter Dale has expressed it "Hindsight brings just another kind of partial judgement".

About the Author

Michael Kilby was born in Sussex during the Second World War. He went to school in Wimbledon and took a first degree at Durham University, a Masters at Leicester and a Doctorate at Magdelan College, Oxford.

He lived and worked in Montreal, Toronto and New York,  being involved in publishing and the music business. Later he moved to London to run an international advertising agency.

Michael now lives in the Cotswolds and in Adelaide with his Australian wife, Licette.

Too Late to be a Hero is a book of poetry written during his time in all of the above places. The poems are written in a number of forms from sonnet and sestina to rhyme royal and villanelle. They represent, in the main, an emotional reaction to his life experiences. 

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December

 

The garden sleeps now. Most trees are undressed,

Flaunting their naked loins. Summer clothes strewn

Wet on the grass, clogging pool and soon

Mulch. Bare trees are sad; they shake their distressed

 

Limbs like a drunk Finn. Round upturned barrow

Runs a desperate squirrel. Two magpies peck

Their stately way; meagre all. A few specks

Of seed, a nut, till winter turns and furrow 

 

Deepen. Now the house preens, staring through glass,

Puffing smoke at the sky, lights flickering

At the jerky sparrows and single robin;

How do they propagate, one in a class?

 

The conifers are welcome now, though cursed

In summer for pine-cones under the mower

And needles in Pimms. Now almost a bower

Above the grass: the greensward is rehearsed.

 


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