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Ben Okri salutes Jeremy Corbyn with poem called A New Dream of Politics Ben Okri salutes Jeremy Corbyn in poetry with A New Dream of Politics
(about 4 hours later)
The poet and novelist Ben Okri has repaid the compliment of being cited as an inspiration in Jeremy Corbyn’s first major speech as Labour leader – in a poem celebrating a new dream of political power bringing peace, health and happiness.The poet and novelist Ben Okri has repaid the compliment of being cited as an inspiration in Jeremy Corbyn’s first major speech as Labour leader – in a poem celebrating a new dream of political power bringing peace, health and happiness.
Corbyn, in his first speech as leader to a Labour conference, namechecked Okri, along with Maya Angelou and Kier Hardie, saying: “It was the great Nigerian writer Ben Okri who perhaps put it best: ‘The most authentic thing about us is our capacity to create, to overcome, to endure, to transform, to love.’”Corbyn, in his first speech as leader to a Labour conference, namechecked Okri, along with Maya Angelou and Kier Hardie, saying: “It was the great Nigerian writer Ben Okri who perhaps put it best: ‘The most authentic thing about us is our capacity to create, to overcome, to endure, to transform, to love.’”
Related: Ben Okri: A new dream of politics – a poemRelated: Ben Okri: A new dream of politics – a poem
Okri, a Booker prize-winning novelist, playwright and poet, has responded with a new poem in which he has does not name Corbyn, but comes close to conjuring a vision of a bearded angel in a tweed jacket. A New Dream of Politics is a salute to idealism, and a rejection of “cynics and doomsayers”, which he has given exclusively to the Guardian. Okri, a Booker prize-winning novelist, playwright and poet, has responded with a new poem in which he does not name Corbyn, but comes close to conjuring a vision of a bearded angel in a tweed jacket. A New Dream of Politics is a salute to idealism, and a rejection of “cynics and doomsayers”, which he has given exclusively to the Guardian.
The two men have never met, and Okri was in the south of France finishing a script when he heard about the speech. He told the Guardian: “I got a text from a Gibraltar friend who was there – I thought he was hallucinating. But I was very pleased, very touched. It’s a brave thing for a politician these days to admit to reading contemporary writers.The two men have never met, and Okri was in the south of France finishing a script when he heard about the speech. He told the Guardian: “I got a text from a Gibraltar friend who was there – I thought he was hallucinating. But I was very pleased, very touched. It’s a brave thing for a politician these days to admit to reading contemporary writers.
“But we need politicians who read widely, who read the classics, the masters, but who also read contemporary writers, who read across colour, across race, across class. If we dont have politicians who read widely, how can we ever get to a new politics?” “But we need politicians who read widely, who read the classics, the masters, but who also read contemporary writers, who read across colour, across race, across class. If we don’t have politicians who read widely, how can we ever get to a new politics?”
His poem asks: “Can we still seek the lost angelsOf our better natures?Can we still wish and willFor poverty’s death and a newer wayTo undo war, and find peace in the labyrinthOf the Middle East, and prosperityIn Africa as the true wayTo end the feared tide of immigration? Can we still seek the lost angelsOf our better natures?Can we still wish and willFor poverty’s death and a newer wayTo undo war, and find peace in the labyrinthOf the Middle East, and prosperityIn Africa as the true wayTo end the feared tide of immigration?
The ode takes an apparent swipe at Corbyn’s opponents, inside and outside the Labour party, who have damned him as idealistic but unelectable, a dreamer not a doer.The ode takes an apparent swipe at Corbyn’s opponents, inside and outside the Labour party, who have damned him as idealistic but unelectable, a dreamer not a doer.
They say there is only one way for politicsThat it looks with hard eyes at the hard worldAnd shapes it with a ruler’s edgeMeasuring what is possible againstAcclaim, support, and votes.They say there is only one way for politicsThat it looks with hard eyes at the hard worldAnd shapes it with a ruler’s edgeMeasuring what is possible againstAcclaim, support, and votes.
Related: Who are the inspirational figures quoted by Jeremy Corbyn in his speech?
Okri sets this against the measures of political greatness “in ancient times”, calculated “by the gold of contentment”, by laughter, peace, justice and health. Even happiness for poets, since one of his indicators is the silent appreciation of bards telling of such good governance.Okri sets this against the measures of political greatness “in ancient times”, calculated “by the gold of contentment”, by laughter, peace, justice and health. Even happiness for poets, since one of his indicators is the silent appreciation of bards telling of such good governance.
The poem promises Related: Who are the inspirational figures quoted by Jeremy Corbyn in his speech?
“Always when least expected an unexpected Figure rises”, and in a final couplet which could almost fit on a lapel badge concludes: The poem promises:
“Always when least expected an unexpected Figure rises”, and in a final couplet that could almost fit on a lapel badge concludes:
There’s always a new wayA better way that’s not been tried beforeThere’s always a new wayA better way that’s not been tried before
Can Corbyn get to Okri’s vision? The playwright said: “Perhaps, perhaps. It depends on how he comes through this political period in which we find ourselves, and whether his party is prepared to let this spirit be possible. But at least, surely, there will be change.”Can Corbyn get to Okri’s vision? The playwright said: “Perhaps, perhaps. It depends on how he comes through this political period in which we find ourselves, and whether his party is prepared to let this spirit be possible. But at least, surely, there will be change.”