Picture of author.

Charles Causley (1917–2003)

Author of Poetry Please!

66+ Works 1,129 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Photo of Charles Causley from old newspaper clipping

Series

Works by Charles Causley

Poetry Please! (1985) 185 copies, 1 review
More Poetry Please! (1988) 141 copies, 2 reviews
Quack! Said the Billy-Goat (1986) 70 copies
Figgie Hobbin (1971) 56 copies, 3 reviews
Collected Poems 1951-1975 (1975) 47 copies
Collected Poems (2000) 37 copies, 1 review
Secret Destinations (1984) 25 copies, 1 review
The Tail of the Trinosaur (1973) 18 copies
Jack the Treacle Eater (1987) 17 copies, 1 review
Hands to dance and skylark (1951) 14 copies, 1 review
Selected Poems for Children (1997) 14 copies
Twenty-Four Hours (1977) 13 copies
Collected Poems 1951-1997 (1997) 11 copies
Underneath the water (1968) 11 copies
Collected Poems 1951-1992 (1992) 9 copies
The Animals' Carol (1978) 8 copies
Union Street (1957) 8 copies
Modern folk ballads (1968) 7 copies
Bring in the Holly (1992) 7 copies
A Field of Vision (1988) 7 copies
Dick Whittington (Puffin Books) (1976) 6 copies, 1 review
The song of the shapes (1977) 5 copies
Johnny Alleluia (1961) 5 copies
The last king of Cornwall (1978) 4 copies
Going to the Fair (1994) 4 copies
Down On The Farm (1992) 3 copies
Best of the Poetry Year (1979) 2 copies
Survivor's Leave (1953) 2 copies
Horizons (1971) — Contributor — 1 copy
Kings' Children (1986) 1 copy
Salt-Sea Verse (1981) 1 copy

Associated Works

Eric Carle's Animals Animals (1989) — Contributor — 2,674 copies, 31 reviews
British Poetry Since 1945 (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 191 copies, 2 reviews
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 120 copies, 1 review
The Puffin Book of Utterly Brilliant Poetry (1998) — Contributor — 117 copies, 1 review
The Everyman Anthology of Poetry for Children (1994) — Contributor — 78 copies
The Faber Book of Christmas (1996) — Contributor — 50 copies, 1 review
The Oxford Book of Scary Tales (1992) — Contributor — 39 copies
The Fourth Ghost Book (1968) — Contributor, some editions — 26 copies
Cornish Short Stories (1976) — Contributor — 24 copies
Cornwall (1981) — Introduction, some editions — 18 copies
Apocalypse: An Anthology (2020) — Contributor — 6 copies
Ghosts and ghastlies (1976) — Contributor — 5 copies
Miscellany One (1964) — Contributor — 3 copies
One Hundred Years a Diocese (1977) — Contributor — 2 copies
Camborne Festival Magazine 1976 — Contributor — 1 copy
Bennett : Allelujah! [programme] 2018 (2018) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
Thirteen delightfully engaging children's poems from Cornish poet Charles Causley are paired with the gorgeous ink-drawing illustrations of American artist Trina Schart Hyman in this wonderful little book. From nonsense poems like 'Quack' Said the Billy Goat, in which all the animals make the wrong sounds, to poignant selections such as Riley, in which an elderly homeless man, known for living happily by himself in the wild, disappears one day, the selections here are all interesting, and show more frequently emotionally involving. I loved the rhythm of the rather grisly I Saw a Jolly Hunter, the haunting feeling of Tell me, tell me, Sarah Jane, and the Cornish folk references in the titular Figgie Hobbin...

Although I read the American edition of Causly's collection, which (as mentioned) contains thirteen poems, I would at some point like to track down a British edition as well, as I understand that some of them have closer to forty selections. I'm not sorry to have read this version of Figgie Hobbin, as I enjoyed the poems immensely and found the illustrations absolutely gorgeous, but I would certainly like to read more! This was my first experience of Causly, and I was quite impressed. I sometimes find that children's poets pay more attention to structure - rhyme scheme, rhythm, etc - than to the beauty of the language itself and, most importantly, the meaning and feeling behind the words. Here however, we have a children's poet who manages to do it all! Perhaps this is owing to the fact that Causly was indeed a poet - a poet for adults, who happened also to write poetry for children. Highly recommended, both to young poetry lovers, and to fellow fans of Trina Schart Hyman's distinctive and beautiful artwork.
show less
Charles Causley is a poet who tends to come with epithets like "much-loved" — he was never a heavyweight Nobel-track intellectual, but he had a big popular following and probably counts as the most respected of the generation of British poets that emerged around the end of World War II. He wrote a lot of poetry for children, and he became a familiar voice on the radio, both of which must account for a good deal of his popularity, whilst his Cornish, working-class, war veteran background show more was something people found easy to identify with at the time. But, crucially, he also had the gift of expressing complex ideas in deceptively simple language (and making it rhyme!).

The selection of Causley in PMP3 includes must of his best-known early poems, such as the unforgettable "Timothy Winters", a poem you feel should be hanging on the wall of every social-worker dealing with child poverty, the enigmatic sonnet "The prisoners of love" ("The prisoners rise and rinse their skies of stone / But in their jailers' eyes they meet their own"), the ever-quotable "The seasons in North Cornwall" and the gloriously tricky "Nursery rhyme of innocence and experience". All wonderful, and at least a little bit perplexing.

On this re-reading I was also stopped in my tracks by "At the grave of John Clare", which must date from Causley's time training as a teacher in Peterborough, where he imagines Clare walking "With one foot in the furrow" and "the poetry bursting like a diamond bomb". Quite.
show less
Charles Causley is a poet who tends to come with epithets like "much-loved" — he was never a heavyweight Nobel-track intellectual, but he had a big popular following and probably counts as the most respected of the generation of British poets that emerged around the end of World War II. He wrote a lot of poetry for children, and he became a familiar voice on the radio, both of which must account for a good deal of his popularity, whilst his Cornish, working-class, war veteran background show more was something people found easy to identify with at the time. But, crucially, he also had the gift of expressing complex ideas in deceptively simple language (and making it rhyme!).

Secret Destinations closes with "Eden Rock", a poem that must have become a firm favourite with GCSE examiners, if the number of YouTube hits for "analysis of Eden Rock" is anything to go by. Causley imagines his parents, both in their twenties and with a picnic already set out, waiting for him on the other side of a river together with the terrier Jack.
I hear them call, "See where the stream-path is !
Crossing is not as hard as you might think."

I had not thought that it would be like this.

The collection has opened with a set of poems about Causley's relatives and his childhood in Launceston, then moves on via trips to Australia and Canada and a few translations from German and Spanish. The poem about Arshile Gorky's "The artist and his mother" (the cover image of some editions) is striking in its unspoken autobiographical subtext: looking at the serious, prematurely adult boy standing beside his care-worn but dignified mother, it's difficult not to imagine that it's a picture of Charles and Laura Causley...
show less
Published in 1951 this book of short stories gives more of a flavour of life in Britain during the second world war than possibly any other book I have read published in that year and yet many of the stories take place in foreign countries.

Charles Causely was a British poet, school teacher and writer, but most of all he was a Cornishman. His first poems entitled Farewell, Aggie Weston were published in 1951 (now long out of print and hideously expensive secondhand), but he also published show more some short stories: Hands to Dance in that year. I read the 1983 re-publication which includes Skylark which sets the record straight on the earlier stories, many of which were written in the first person. The short stories tell of the exploits of a Seaman who enlisted in the Royal Navy in 1940 and was trained as a coder, he was demobbed 6 years later, and spent much his service overseas in Gibraltar, Spain, Malta, Italy, Egypt, Australia and Africa. Causely's afterword Skylark makes it clear that his stories were largely fictional; his life as a coder may have been just as dangerous, but the colourful derring-do of some of the exploits were beyond the range of the shy, unpromising physical specimen that was Causely at that time.

Many of the stories take place in dockland areas in British naval bases abroad and are concerned with enemy attacks or more usually with local civilians or fellow seamen that he met during his service. The stories generally play down the danger and their matter of fact re-telling makes one feels that they could only have been written by a circumspect Englishmen. They never fail to emphasise the discomfort of living in digs abroad, or the unrelenting work schedules, or a seaman who never really got over his sea sickness. His short spells on leave place him in another world that of his rural background in a small Cornish town. Interspersed with the exploits of seaman Causely are three or four stories based in Cornwall written in an omnipresent voice and they are so realistically presented that they fit right in with the flavour of the more biographical tales. There are nineteen stories, averaging about 8 pages each, complete in themselves and with a poets eye for detail and a writers eye for colourful characters. There is no drop in quality and a few of the stories are very good indeed, some prefiguring the dangers of war service on the minds of those who survived.

The flavour of Britain in the 1940's is well captured, through the eyes of this Cornishman. The transport arrangements in wartime: for example 6 changes of train to get up to the base on the Scapa Flow, or the life in a small town during wartime, or British serviceman abroad. A fine collection of short stories which capture life in exceptional circumstances and so 4 stars,
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Brian Patten Contributor
Vernon Scannell Contributor
Geoffrey Hill Contributor
Patricia Beer Contributor
Roger McGough Contributor
Alan Brownjohn Contributor
Jack Clemo Contributor
Patric Dickinson Contributor
Brian Higgins Contributor
Rosemary Tonks Contributor
Edward Lucie-Smith Contributor
Tom McGrath Contributor
Jeremy Robson Contributor
John Most Contributor
Michael Mackmin Contributor
Peter Levi S.J. Contributor
D. M. Thomas Contributor
Ted Hughes Contributor
D. M. Black Contributor
Robert Nye Contributor
Nathaniel Tarn Contributor
Paul Roche Contributor
Michael Baldwin Contributor
David Holbrook Contributor
Anthony Thwaite Contributor
Jon Stallworthy Contributor
Edwin Morgan Contributor
Alan Bold Contributor
Christopher Logue Contributor
Krystyna Turska Illustrator
Peter Barrett Cover designer
Barbara Firth Illustrator
Michael Foreman Illustrator
John Cowper Powys Contributor
Barbara Swiderska Illustrator
Tony Ross Illustrator
John Lawrence Illustrator
Jill Bennett Illustrator
Trina Schart Hyman Illustrator
Ethel L. Heins Introduction
Gerald Rose Illustrator
Robert Updegraff Cover designer
Shirley Felts Illustrator
Jill Gardiner Illustrator
Elfan Jones Translator
Judith Horwood Illustrator
Peter Whiteman Illustrator
Charles Keeping Illustrator
David Mostyn Illustrator
Lisa Kopper Illustrator

Statistics

Works
66
Also by
16
Members
1,129
Popularity
#22,742
Rating
3.9
Reviews
13
ISBNs
118
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs