Sally Bayley
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Sally Bayley
Blog Introduction

A Sentence Space: a Manifesto

A sentence is a settlement of parts, a happy arrangement — I write to settle myself — although my subject matter may disturb or challenge. I hope so. This blog is my play space. I also write to play: to make shapes, to produce images, make unexpected arrangements. I write to replenish my voice but also to pay attention: to focus, to adjust my lens. I write to find my subject and that takes a while. I have to play through several drafts and versions. Play is also work until I find that surprising alignments between words. This is also a space for whimsy, for dreaming, for opening up space — extra-territorial, moon-lit, sunlit, whatever she stumbles upon — a cracked door, an open room, a space full of toys. She beckons me in. Happenstance. Whimsy. Mood. A trail of thoughts. Writing is also thinking. It is speaking out loud: a form of address, an argument, rhetoric, a good arrangement with words.

Good syntax is elastic — it pings — I remember that game we used to play as children, cat’s cradle. Sometimes we played with thread and sometimes with elastic. I write to create shape and texture, to hear that ping, the release of energy. Writing is a way of recharging. Syntax is also a form of wiring and the wiring needs a lot of work, so I write and rewrite. I shape shift. Nothing stays still for long. A writer is a restless creature, pacing and pacing around the room, sleepless, her eyes closed, groping her way into other worlds. That famous sentence from Virginia Woolf’s To The Lighthouse describing the death of Mrs. Ramsay:

Mr. Ramsay, stumbling along a passage one dark morning, stretched his arms out, but Mrs. Ramsay having died rather suddenly the night before, his arms, though stretched out, remained empty.

Syntax squirming into life even in the face of Death, perhaps because of Death, and so she must squirm through a series of interrupted subordinate clauses which somehow reflects life interrupted — those arms outstretched, stretched out, his arms.

‘The poet, Stevie Smith at her typewriter’ by Suzie Hanna (from ‘The Blue from Heaven’ film)

‘The poet, Stevie Smith at her typewriter’ by Suzie Hanna (from ‘The Blue from Heaven’ film)

 

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'The summer night had been cool when they came home and her finger was slender'.
Sally BayleyJune 28, 2021 Comments
She smiled, a sweet dimpling smile that lit up her plump face . . . .
Sally BayleyJune 7, 2021
‘ . . . and it is rather a pleasing thought that none of them pays a halfpenny of rent.’
Sally BayleyMay 27, 2021 Comments
'. . . . he then goes through a phase of intense sexiness.'
Sally BayleyMay 22, 2021 Comment
Rooks (Smoky supposed) fled home across a cloud-streaked chilly sky
Sally BayleyMay 12, 2021 Comment
'Shame makes us creep behind the curtains and stay there.'
Sally BayleyApril 14, 2021Comment
At the altar, she felt something yellow . . .
Sally BayleyApril 7, 2021
'A buttercup is a flower that grows in the wrong place.'
Sally BayleyMarch 24, 2021 Comment
‘I loved Ophelia’
Sally BayleyMarch 20, 2021
‘One thing I've noticed about the human mind is that it goes in jerks’.
Sally BayleyMarch 14, 2021
'There were always bluebottles buzzing on summer afternoons.'
Sally BayleyMarch 6, 2021 Comments
We fail! But screw your courage to the sticking-place, / And we'll not fail!
Sally BayleyMarch 2, 2021 Comment
'A bundle of angry nerves, with the baby screaming, and a toddler in tow….’
Sally BayleyFebruary 27, 2021 Comment
Eleanor was tall, Eleanor was small . . . .
Sally BayleyFebruary 21, 2021Comment
'How I would like to believe in tenderness'
Sally BayleyFebruary 17, 2021
I have considered myself as a particle broken off from the grand mass of mankind . . .
Sally BayleyFebruary 13, 2021 Comment
. . . God would not arrange it . . .
Sally BayleyFebruary 3, 2021Comment
'By the turfy road and under the rocks were many flowers: . . . '
Sally BayleyJanuary 29, 2021
'For this was the beginning of our burning time . . . '
Sally BayleyJanuary 24, 2021
A gust of wind ripped at the trees behind him; their branches, fitfully lit by the storm . . .
Sally BayleyJanuary 18, 2021Comment
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Contact Sally directly: sally.bayley@ell.ox.ac.uk

Or her agents at The Wylie Agency: Sarah Chalfant: SChalfant@wylieagency.com