David Morley, photo by Graeme Oxby
David Morley’s last book FURY was a Poetry Book Society Choice and shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection. David won the Ted Hughes Award for The Invisible Gift: Selected Poems. His other books from Carcanet Press include The Magic of What’s There, The Gypsy and the Poet, a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, Enchantment and The Invisible Kings, also a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and TLS Book of the Year. He is a Professor of Creative Writing at Warwick University and a Fellow of The Royal Society of Literature.

About Passion, by David Morley
Drawing on Romany language, storytelling and the speech of birds, award-winning poet David Morley offers a provocative and passionate invitation to reflect afresh on the ways in which the lives, stories and fate of humans – and the more than human – are twinned and entwined. In poems that crackle with verbal energy, he invokes a world where God is Salieri to Nature’s Mozart, in which hummingbirds hover like actors ‘in a theatre of flowers,’ pipistrelles become piccolos, swans swerve comets, and a Zyzzyx wasp is ‘a zugzwang of six legs and letters.’ There are exuberant celebrations of Romany language in the style of Edward Thomas; of how a Yellowhammer inspired Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony; of the world-shaping discoveries of women scientists; and an autobiographical sequence, which roots this poet’s authority and reflects on how power shapes what may be said in public.
You can read more about Passion on the publisher's website here. Below, you can read two sample poems from the collection.
From Passion
Dialect
Evening froze to a night nailed with stars.
I watched a birdbox fill with flying words
fleeing the chill by bundling in on each other.
I took the box from its hook and prised its lid
and shook the lives of language out of it
festooning my table with wings and feathers,
writhing, fluttering, like a bird made of birds:
Bumbarrel, Hedge Mumruffin, Poke Pudding,
Huggen-Muffin, Juffit, Jack-in-a-Bottle,
Feather Poke, Hedge Jug, Prinpriddle,
Ragamuffin, Billy-featherpoke, Puddneypoke,
Bellringer, Nimble Tailor, French Pie,
Long Pod, Bush Oven, and Miller’s Thumb.
I tucked them in this box before they woke.
We Make Manx Shearwaters Vomit Bottlecaps
‘Here is what a stomach full of plastic
looks like’, says the bird reserve warden.
‘You can see it stretched so much that the shapes
of plastic are visible. When I say we make
shearwaters vomit bottle caps I’m not exaggerating.’
He twists the dead Manxie on its back,
snipping the sac open. His forceps fossick
into the dissected bird. Rubbish piles up
by the body. I try to focus on the wing feathers.
Eye-bright and gliding over wave crests
the shearwater rides on updraught and jetstream.
A placid sea is her unploughed field.
The bird bends on the blade of storm to turn
the seabed over, drive deep swells to the surface.
The wind swings north, the moon’s gravity
tilts the sea-surge. For phytoplankton this
is everything life needs, and they flicker
and breed in that frenzy of crosscurrents
the fish following the glut of plankton
dumped on the surface like data
from the dark. The shearwater’s compass
stills, she stabs straight into the undertow
where her fish-prey spiral in their bait-ball
like an underwater galaxy, a million stars
spawning in a nebula of bioluminescence.
The warden stares up at me: ‘Don’t look away.’
This is what a poem full of plastic looks like.