National Poetry Library

The National Poetry Library is a free public collection housed at Royal Festival Hall in London's Southbank Centre. Situated on the fifth floor of the Royal Festival Hall, overlooking the river Thames, the library aims to hold all contemporary UK poetry publications since 1912. It houses the largest collection in Britain, numbering over 200,000 items, including works by small presses. It also holds audio and video materials, critical texts and works for children for loan and reference.

National Poetry Library
TypeNational library
ScopeIncluding contemporary UK poetry publications since 1912
Established1953
LocationLevel 5, Royal Festival Hall, Southbank Centre, London SE1 8XX
Collection
Items collectedbooks, journals, cuttings, poetry magazines, audio and video recordings, children's poetry, critical texts
Sizeover 200,000 items[1]
Access and use
Access requirementsOpen to anyone. Free membership
WebsiteThe Poetry Library
Map

The library contains work by non-UK poets and publishers and press cuttings are also archived for members' research. Membership is free and material is borrowed through the national inter-lending library services or returned by post.[1][2][3][4][5] The library provides support for schools nationally and locally. The venue has an exhibition and event space.

History and future plans

Use and enjoy this place. Burrow in, borrow on.

John Hegley
speaking of the Poetry Library[5]

This is a pleasant library. I'd enjoy every minute
But for the danger of meeting other poets in it.

Wendy Cope
speaking of the Poetry Library[6]

The library was established in 1953 on the recommendation of the Poetry Panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain, with the remit of promoting modern and contemporary poetry. Opened by poets TS Eliot and Herbert Read, the library quickly grew beyond the capacity of premises and then the next, moving from Albemarle Street to Piccadilly, to Long Acre in Covent Garden and then to a larger space back in Piccadilly.

It has been located at the Royal Festival Hall since 1988, when Seamus Heaney opened the new venue. With the relocation, the library was given the Signal Poetry Collection of children's poetry books which had been held by Book House. This formed the basis for the library's body of works for children and young adults, available for loan and reference. The beech furniture was designed for the site by Terrance Conran. The library was closed from 2005 to 2007 during refurbishment of the Festival Hall building. Its re-opening was celebrated with London's first festival of literature.[4][5][6][7]

The Poetry Library:
housing
of arousing
browsing

Roger McGough
speaking of the Poetry Library[6]

Commentators on BBC's Radio 4 have described it as one of the world's greatest libraries.[7] Many poets and editors have developed their collections and anthologies at the Poetry Library, including Poet Laureate Ted Hughes. He worked on the Rattle Bag anthology at the library during the 1970s, writing of the experience:

Very strange experience, squeezing every morning into modern poetry, and sitting in there all day all curled up with book clamped over mouth inhaling deeply, then coming out in the five or six o clock dark. Many other poets find their inspiration in the library. It's truly a place where poets and readers meet. As well as poets laureate, though, we see school students, families with young children, casual readers, critics, academics, teachers and artists 'squeezing every morning into modern poetry.[8][9]

Poet Philip Larkin was a vocal supporter. He wrote "The Poetry Library is one of the occasional pure flowerings of the imagination for which the English are so seldom given credit".[6] Poet Laureate Andrew Motion echoes Larkin's sentiments: "The most extraordinary thing, is the fact that it exists at all. As Larkin said, it's the kind of thing that you don't expect England to do. It flies in the face of the way we generally run things, ie neglect things. I used it a lot when I was doing the Here to Eternity anthology. The stock is extremely good and very catholic – and the ancillary services, such as quote-checking, are wonderful." [6]

[10][11]

gollark: > Coincidentally, these two programs implement exactly the functionality that PPCG consensus has decided qualifies a language as being a real programming language. Therefore, it is definitely a real programming language. hmmmm.
gollark: Brotlipython™ uses a better compression algorithm too (for short data, anyway).
gollark: It's only for "Kolmogorov complexity code golf competitions".
gollark: Well, Brotlipython™, my new golfing language, has native highly advanced compression.
gollark: javascript_irl

References

  1. Poetry Library official site
  2. Poetry Book Society Poetry Library profile
  3. "London's top 10 peaceful places", The Guardian 18 April 2012
  4. "Welcome back, Poetry Library" 5 July 2007, Guardian
  5. Valencia, Miriam, "The Poetry Library", NATE Classroom Spring 2008 Volume/issue: No. 4
  6. "Live poets society", The Independent 10 May 2003
  7. "Southbank to Host London's First Festival of Literature", London Evening Standard 17 May 2007
  8. The Letters of Ted Hughes, Faber and Faber (2007)
  9. Valencia, Miriam, "Poetry at Southbank Centre", NATE Classroom, Spring 2011 Volume/issue: No. 13
  10. "'Floating' glass pavilion plan for Southbank Centre", BBC News, 6 March 2013
  11. "£100 million revamp of Southbank Centre hailed as 'biggest step forward since the ‘60s'", Independent, 6 March 2013

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