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The Daily Poem

Simon Curtis's "Satie, at the End of Term"

The Daily Poem

Goldberry Studios

Education For Kids, Arts, Kids & Family

4.6729 Ratings

🗓️ 13 June 2025

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

My friend Simon Curtis, who has died aged 70, was one of the small band of people who work tirelessly, for no pay and few thanks, to promote poetry. An excellent poet himself, he edited two magazines and helped many struggling writers into print.

His heroes were Wordsworth, Hardy and Causley. His own poetry, which rhymed and was perfectly accessible, was distinguished by, in his words, its "shrewd, ironic and Horatian tone". It ranged from accomplished light verse, which was often very funny, to deeply affecting poems about family bereavement. He appeared in the Faber Poetry Introduction 6 (1985).

Simon was born in Burnley, Lancashire, the son of Susan, an English teacher, and the Rev Douglas Curtis, a vicar, and grew up in Northamptonshire. Armed with an English degree from Cambridge University, and a PhD from Essex, on Darwin as writer and scientist, he became a lecturer in comparative literature at Manchester University. He was active in the Hardy Society, editing the Thomas Hardy Journal for several years, worked quietly for the Campaign to Protect Rural England, and spent a lot of time caring for his mother, who lived to a great age.

Eventually, he moved to Plymouth and in 2010 took over from me as the editor of the little magazine The Interpreter's House, which he made, in Hardy's phrase, "a house of hospitalities". We were both determined that it shouldn't be just a platform for the editor's friends but should be open to good poets of all stripes.

But early in 2013 all plans had to be shelved as this active outdoor man was diagnosed with incurable cancer. Though paralysed below the waist, he remained positive, continued to watch the yellowhammers outside his window and never allowed his many visitors to feel downhearted. Shoestring Press rushed out a volume of his new and selected poems, Comet Over Greens Norton, which contains all his best work.

Simon was old-fashioned in the best kind of ways, a former 1960s student who canvassed for Labour but who dressed conservatively and retained a stiff upper lip and immaculate manners. He hated pollution, literary infighting, and public greed and waste. He loved bird-watching, football, woodcuts and the Lake District.

-bio via Merryn Williams’ 2014 Obituary for Curtis in The Guardian



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome back to The Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios.

0:08.3

I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Friday, June 13th, 2025.

0:13.5

Today's poem is by the 20th century poet Simon Curtis, and it's called Sati at the end of term.

0:21.1

It's an odd sort of niche poem imagining the French composer, Eric Sati,

0:29.8

writing a song that captures the mood at the end of an academic term.

0:36.8

And as bizarre as that setup sounds,

0:40.3

I think it's pretty relatable to people

0:42.8

who have been through some serious academic study,

0:45.1

especially some intense courses in philosophy or literary theory.

0:49.4

And it explains quite well

0:50.7

why I feel the need at the end of a difficult academic season

0:53.7

to pick up something by PG-Woodhouse. And maybe why I feel the need at the end of a difficult academic season to pick up something

0:55.4

by PG Woodhouse and maybe why I find so much solace in a little light first on a Friday.

1:03.2

Here is Simon Curtis's settee at the end of term.

1:09.4

The mine's eyes ache from Henry James, like arms from heavy cases lugged for miles,

1:18.2

theme and structure, imagery and tone.

1:21.7

From Lawrence to how hard I dug for insights sunk yards deep, interged prose, theme and structure, imagery and tone.

1:32.6

Web of necessity in Daniel Duranda, gloom in Dorrit, gloom in Flaubert, one more week to go at

1:41.1

theme and structure, imagery and tone. So, fitful fresh as April's sun,

1:49.5

your welcome clown. Your good melodic dissonance will pierce low clouds of syllabus with humorous grace,

1:59.7

mercy of irreverence.

2:05.3

This has been the Daily Poem.

...

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