 Nigel Clarke’s piece for the Buizengen Brass Band, Earthrise, is going to be recorded soon and, as with What Hope Saw, they plan also to record the poem I wrote (with the same title) to stand alongside the music. It’s all very exciting. Meanwhile, a lady called Lut Mois designed a poster for the European Brass Band Championships and included the last line of my poem in the design; ‘and, just for a while, it seemed that man would think as gods thought.’ It’s easy to forget now, but when men first looked down on the earth there was a collective sense of optimism. They could see no boundaries, no frontiers, no races, and there was a sense – just for a while – that man could transcend himself. We are now sadder and wiser.
Nigel Clarke’s piece for the Buizengen Brass Band, Earthrise, is going to be recorded soon and, as with What Hope Saw, they plan also to record the poem I wrote (with the same title) to stand alongside the music. It’s all very exciting. Meanwhile, a lady called Lut Mois designed a poster for the European Brass Band Championships and included the last line of my poem in the design; ‘and, just for a while, it seemed that man would think as gods thought.’ It’s easy to forget now, but when men first looked down on the earth there was a collective sense of optimism. They could see no boundaries, no frontiers, no races, and there was a sense – just for a while – that man could transcend himself. We are now sadder and wiser.
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