The most successful pieces in Norman MacCaig's Collected Poems tend to be lists of one kind or another. He is best, too, when he has found something to celebrate. A poem such as 'Praise of a Collie', which enumerates the virtues of an admired sheep-dog, now dead, works well enough as a primitive catalogue. The fourth of its five three-line stanzas gives something of its flavour:
LRB 17 October 1985 | PDF Download
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