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Frank Redpath : ウィキペディア英語版 | Frank Redpath
Frank Redpath (1927-1990) was a Hull poet.〔(University of Hull, Hull poets' page ).〕 He taught at Hull College of Further Education, after a period writing for children's comics in London. He features in Douglas Dunn’s 1982 anthology of Hull poets ''A Rumoured City'', alongside Sean O’Brien, Douglas Houston and Peter Didsbury. Fellow Hull poet Philip Larkin contributed a preface to the anthology. Writing to Redpath, Larkin declared "Yours are the only poems in the book I would have been glad to have written." Redpath forms the subject of Sean O’Brien’s elegy "To the Unknown God of Hull and Holderness". His collections are ''To the Village and Other Poems'' (Sonus Press, 1986) and ''How It Turned Out: Selected Poems'' (Rialto, 1996). In 2015 his poem "In and Out" was published in the ''Times Literary Supplement'', mistakenly presented as a newly discovered poem by Philip Larkin, a mistake that resulted in Redpath trending on Twitter.〔(Magazine backtracks on Philip Larkin poem claim ), by Alexandra Topping, in ''the Guardian'', published 26 May 2015; retrieved 26 May 2015〕 Lines from a poem of Redpath’s are inscribed on a statue off Great Union Street in the Drypool district of East Hull. The statue sits on the site of St Peter's church, which was destroyed by enemy action in 1941, and Redpath's poem is in the voice of the apostle Simon Peter. ==References==
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Frank Redpath」の詳細全文を読む
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