Lynette Roberts
Owen Sheers explores poetry set in the British landscape. He visits the Welsh village of Llanybri to discover the story behind Lynette Roberts's Poem from Llanybri.
Poet and author Owen Sheers presents a series in which he explores six great works of poetry set in the British landscape. Each poem explores a sense of place and identity across Britain and opens the doors to captivating stories about the places and the lives of the poets themselves.
Lynette Roberts is not a famous poet. She only published one full collection of poems and her work has been almost forgotten, but her vivid, modern, hot-blooded writing about a Welsh village and her time there during the Second World War reveals an extraordinary woman and a brilliant poetic voice who Robert Graves described in the 1940s as 'one of the few true poets now writing'.
Roberts was brought up in a wealthy family in Argentina but married a writer from Carmarthenshire in 1939 at the outbreak of war and spent the next nine years living in poverty in a Welsh-speaking village. She involved herself in every aspect of village life and despite being accused of being a spy found a fierce passion for the local people and the landscape.
Sheers visits the unassuming village of Llanybri where she lived and is now buried, and uncovers the moving story behind her poem called simply Poem from Llanybri, an invitation to the young soldier poet Alun Lewis to pay her a visit. He talks to locals who remember her and admire her work, and to the National Poet of Wales, Gillian Clarke.
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Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Owen Sheers |
Executive Producer | Fiona Morris |
Producer | Rupert Edwards |
Director | Rupert Edwards |
Broadcasts
- Mon 1 Jun 2009 20:30
- Tue 2 Jun 2009 00:20
- Tue 2 Jun 2009 03:50
- Thu 4 Jun 2009 22:00
- Fri 5 Jun 2009 03:45
- Wed 14 Oct 2009 19:30
- Thu 15 Oct 2009 03:05
- Wed 14 Sep 2011 02:00
- Sun 1 Sep 2013 19:00
- Mon 2 Sep 2013 03:20
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