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After reading the poem, try this comprehension activity and then do some writing.
We are doing Chapter 6: Hobbies, I like doing...
Roberto is playful and wants to talk about sex in cars and gear sticks. We lose ourselves in body parts: engine, carburettor, vroom, vroom.
Carla likes cooking, the gnocchi her grandmother taught her how to make - a whole day set aside, potatoes in piles, all the family peeling. Her fingers forgetful of typewriter keys.
Giancarlo bicycles twenty kilometres every Sunday (we imagine his overfed thighs in lycra and laugh). He lists all the cups he won when the weekend was just one long white road, his podgy hands making circles, his moustached mouth the whirring of spokes.
Gianni goes back to his village, kisses his seven little sisters, loves checking his row of reddening tomatoes. He wears different shoes, screwing his face up at buckled black leather. No briefcase. No boss.
Francesca likes going to the mountains, the lakes, the sea - wherever her friends have houses. We are all invited. When you open the windows all the houses have beautiful views, and there is panetone for breakfast.
Franco plays cards in the bar with his friends. Same bar, same friends: every evening playing poker at Vittorio's place. He counts the years on his fingers as if he had never counted before.
Lucia says she cries all weekend, every weekend - since Massimo left her. She sits in the flat and cries. There is nothing else to do.
The silence pulls at her words, dangling cut-out and foreign on the air, begging to be mistakable: a disappearing trick against the classroom's white walls.
Then Roberto claps his hands. He meant to say he likes practising English. We all groan.
Robert Seatter
With kind permission of the poet, previously published in Poetry as a Foreign Language, edited by Martin Bates, White Adder Press, 1999
Using the poem as a model, write a list of hobbies and pastimes, either: (a) what each of your friends likes doing. (b) what you like doing at different times and in different places, for example, in winter...., in the city...., and so on.
Add notes to each pastime: what do they or you do? How do they or you feel about it? Now turn your notes into a narrative, trying to express the feelings. Can you make a poem? Send it to us.
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