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‘Before You Were Mine’ by Carol Ann Duffy

‘Climbing My Grandfather’ by Andrew Waterhouse

‘Eden Rock’ by Charles Causley

‘The Farmer’s Bride’ by Charlotte Mew

‘Follower’ by Seamus Heaney

‘Letters from Yorkshire’ by Maura Dooley

‘Love’s Philosophy’ by Percy Bysshe Shelley

‘Mother, any distance’ by Simon Armitage

‘Neutral Tones’ by Thomas Hardy

‘Porphyria’s Lover’ by Robert Browning

‘Singh Song!’ by Daljit Nagra

‘Sonnet 29 – ‘I think of thee!’’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

‘Walking Away’ by Cecil Day-Lewis

‘When We Two Parted’ by Lord Byron

‘Winter Swans’ by Owen Sheers

'Climbing My Grandfather’ is a deeply intimate exploration of familial love and memory, narrated through the extended metaphor of a boy climbing his grandfather as though scaling a mountain. The poem begins with a declaration of intent – to climb “free, without a rope or net” – suggesting both vulnerability and trust. As the speaker ascends from the shoes to the summit of his grandfather’s head, he encounters physical textures that symbolise character: scar tissue, cracked shoes, warm skin, and a “good heart.” These bodily features become footholds for understanding the man, imbuing the climb with a sense of reverence and discovery. The lack of regular rhyme and meter reflects the organic, unbroken act of climbing, and the linear progression up the grandfather’s body mirrors both physical ascent and increasing emotional closeness.

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