Announcing the publication of ARKWORK with ARTWORK by Andrew McNeillie and Julian Bell, published March 2006
24pp 170mm x 240mm ISBN 0-9547275-5-X
‘Arkwork’, a series of eleven sonnets by Andrew McNeillie, finds in the loss of the Stranraer-Larne ferry in January 1953, in which 133 passengers and crew drowned, a focus for a reflection on the literary history of shipwreck, death, and survival. The poems are superbly illustrated in dramatic drawings by the artist Julian Bell.
 
 (vii)
ALTOGETHER ELSEWHERE
They went aboard in ones and twos,
 in no great shape or order. The usual
 kind of crowd and would be casual
 but for those quayside feeling queasy blues.
 They were thrown together… (Excuse me.)
 But they’d need more than dry Ulster humour
 to keep their spirits above water,
 as they gasped and struggled in the sea.
Meanwhile, deep inland, the steading hove to.
 As if a poem on the shipping forecast
 was that moment conceiving. The radio
 announced the disaster, in patrician English:
 the old assault and innocence lost
 that poetry is heir to, and the Irish.
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