Paul Archer

Paul Archer Poems

Don’t drive a car. Dreaming up a poem
is not compatible with judging
distances and steering straight.
...

If this poem came from IKEA
It would be a flatpack poem
You'd have to assemble it
In your own time
...

It had climbed from the lavender
Under the open window
And now creeps along the sill,
I think of Hughes' thought-fox
...

I’d like to join this gang
Of poets, their books
Tower above me – beckoning…
As I pull one out
...

Dark suddenly, the day's circulation choked off.
Dizzy carlights, a wipered transparent
Half-moon dissolves.
...

Tugging and tearing -
Backing off - tugging and tearing,
But this is not a terrier.
...

By 1.20 a.m. the firestorm
Raged 2,000 metres into the sky
Even the canals blazed,
...

Her flesh shrank
From the spars
Of her shipwreck,
She ate less and less
...

Paul Archer Biography

Graduated in English Language and Literature from Pembroke College, Oxford University. Pursued a career in finance in the UK, Europe and Japan. Now divides his time between homes in London and Mallorca, Spain.)

The Best Poem Of Paul Archer

Advice To Poets

Don’t drive a car. Dreaming up a poem
is not compatible with judging
distances and steering straight.


Live as long as you can. But think
about dying, the dark mystery
of death will add depth to your poems.


Don’t make decisions. Rethink
all the time – you, more than most, should
know we are all flotsam on a great river.


Don’t disengage. Live usefully,
greet your neighbour, be warm to those
you write about – they are your readers.


Don’t fall in love with the Muse, it’ll only
create trouble. Write about happiness –
being unhappy is a crowded market.


Write and then re-write. Even if the poem
takes years, make it seem like it took
only the seconds it takes to read.


Anyone can write if they have the time
and will, but most prefer the hassle of living
to the hassle of words – that’s a comforting thought.


Be precise, like surgeons or lawyers.
Desire, also, to re-shape the world
as fundamentally as scientists or soldiers.


Make your writing seem like no-one else’s,
for that you’ll have to ignore any advice
given to you – so you can ignore all I’ve said.

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