- On the Train (poem)
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On The Train is a poem by Gillian Clarke. Its chief subject matter is the Paddington rail crash and its aftermath.
The poem imagines commuters on the train heading towards the "bone-ship" and refers to the anxiety of passengers and loved ones alike in the days following the disaster. Clarke uses the technology of 1999 to ground her poem in reality - the mobile phones of the victims lie in the wreckage of the train while their friends and family frantically try to ring them. She quotes the phrase:
"The Vodafone you are calling
May have been switched off.
Please call later."
This everyday phrase takes on a new, more sinister meaning in context. Clarke concludes the poem by taking a lenient view, post-Paddington, of train passengers who make mobile phone calls - they no longer seem irritating, merely essential for reassuring people that they are still alive.
This poem was written soon after the mobile phone boom of the late 1990s and as such is one of the first comments on the phenomenon. Two years later, mobile phones would again be closely linked with tragedy on 11 September 2001.
The poem has been included in the AQA Anthology for study at GCSE alongside several other of Gillian Clarke's poems. It is one of a number of Clarke poems - including A Difficult Birth and The Field-Mouse - which comment on contemporary events alongside the minutiae of Clarke's own life.
External links
AQA Anthology Poems from
Other CulturesCluster 1"Limbo" by Edward Kamau Brathwaite · "Nothing's Changed" by Tatamkhulu Afrika · "Island Man" by Grace Nichols · "Blessing" by Imtiaz Dharker · "Two Scavengers in a Truck, Two Beautiful People In A Mercedes" by Lawrence Ferlinghetti · "Night of the Scorpion" by Nissim Ezekiel · "Vultures" by Chinua Achebe · "What Were They Like?" by Denise LevertovCluster 2"Search for My Tongue" by Sujata Bhatt · "Unrelated Incidents" by Tom Leonard · "Half Caste" by John Agard · "Love After Love" by Derek Walcott · "This Room" by Imtiaz Dharker · "Not My Business" by Niyi Osundare · "Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan" by Moniza Alvi · "Hurricane Hits England" by Grace NicholsSeamus Heaney "Storm on the Island" · "Perch" · "Blackberry-Pickin]" · "Death of a Naturalist" · "Digging" · "Mid-Term Break" · "Follower" · "At a Potato Digging"Gillian Clarke "Catrin" · "Baby-sitting" · "Mali" · "A Difficult Birth, Easter 1998" · "The Field Mouse" · "October" · "On the Train" · "Cold Knap Lake"Carol Ann Duffy "Havisham" · "Elvis's Twin Sister" · "Anne Hathaway" · "Salome" · "We Remember Your Childhood Well" · "Before You Were Mine" ·"Education for Leisure"· "Stealing"Simon Armitage "Mother, any distance greater than a single span" · "My father thought it..." · "Homecoming" · "November" · "Kid" · "Those bastards in their mansions" · "I've made out a will; I'm leaving myself" · "Hitcher"Pre-1914 "On My First Sonne" by Ben Jonson · "Song of the Old Mother" by William Butler Yeats · "The Affliction of Margaret" by William Wordsworth · "The Little Boy Lost and The Little Boy Found" by William Blake · "Tichborne's Elegy" by Charles Tichborne · "The Man He Killed" by Thomas Hardy · "Patrolling Barnegat" by Walt Whitman · "Sonnet CXXX" by William Shakespeare · "My Last Duchess" by Robert Browning · "The Laboratory" by Robert Browning · "Ulysses" by Alfred Tennyson · "The Village Schoolmaster" by Oliver Goldsmith · "The Eagle" by Alfred Tennyson · "Sonnet" by John ClareProse "Flight" by Doris Lessing · "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit" by Sylvia Plath · "Your Shoes" by Michèle Roberts · "Growing Up" by Joyce Cary · "The End of Something" by Ernest Hemingway · "Chemistry" by Graham Swift · "Snowdrops" by Leslie NorrisCategories:- Poems
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