George Neame, Old Portmuthian and a founding editor of Portsmouth Point blog, has published a pamphlet, The Infinite Flood, which explores the vastness of space through the unremarkable details of modern life: lasagne sheets stretch out like layers of time, snooker balls roll into constellations, an astronaut's fingerprints are left in frost on a postbox.
The Infinite Flood is full of warm and inviting poems which subtly evoke important questions about our place in the universe, written with stellar lyricism and attention to the melody of language.
In the video below, filmed at the book launch, George reads from his collection.
Copies of George's poetry are available to purchase, and you can borrow copy from the PGS Library. Click here, for more information on 'The Infinite Flood'
friday
night at the starlight inn
you
men turned the snooker table into
ground
control as you strategized over
every
angle of theoretical geometric shapes.
on
the table next to yours, I commanded the
striped
and spotted balls into the outline of Orion,
and
the cue became my telescope to search
the
outer reaches of the cloth for black holes.
“the
universe and its contents” was the name
of
your university module, but for a moment your
universe
shrank to the size of that pub’s back room
and
I flickered like the most distant of its contents.
You can read some of George's fantastic Portsmouth Point articles here:
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2012/07/isles-of-wonder.html
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2012/11/why-alt-j-deserved-to-win-2012-mercury.html
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2012/02/our-version-of-events-by-emeli-sande.html
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2012/04/mind-over-music.html
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2012/07/coriolanus-review.html
http://portsmouthpoint.blogspot.com/2013/08/favourite-album-place-we-ran-from-by.html
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