His poetry's subject matter ranges widely, including self-reflexive poems that discuss their own creation - "i remove i and a colon from two lines above" in 'The Moon Upoon the Waters' to the loving farewell in 'You Were Wearing Blue', from elegiac fragments such as 'In Memoriam Ludwig Wittgenstein' to political engagements in poems like 'Human Warmth' or 'Nothing'. Formally, while Raworth is not often given to familiar forms or full-rhyme, he will often shape his poems with stanzas or structural systems that counterpoint the flow of the poem.
That flow is a fast one, a stream of images interlinking and resonating off one another; in Raworth's work, it is not the place of the poet to extrapolate intelligible meanings from these for a listener, the speaker in 'Wedding Day' insisting that "i made this pact, intelligence / shall not replace intuition". It is to this end that each image rapidly takes the place of its predecessor, too fast to work out an intellectual response completely, and his delivery is rapid to match - not at any point unclear, simply committed to what he calls, in 'The Vein', "the requisite speed" - and exhilarating to attend to.
Raworth introduces the CD with a brief preface to his history and style, but not the poems - he finds individual introductions "at worst tedious and at best more interesting than the poems that follow" - and they need none. Robert Creeley has said "I'm fascinated by what he's doing. He's an extraordinary poet"; this is an extraordinary reading.
His recording was made on 18 April 2005 at The Audio Workshop, London and was produced by Richard Carrington.



This poem is part of the guided tour given by: