A guide to reimagining our relationship with the natural world through the Welsh poetic tradition.
At a time of biodiversity loss and climate grief, we need to reset our relationship with the natural world. Cynefin helps us hear the voices of people throughout the centuries who have, through poetry, expressed a different way of connecting with the living world around us.
Carwyn Graves explores how the Welsh poetic tradition offers a different view of nature and demonstrates how connecting to our place in the world can help us address the challenges we face.
Find fresh perspectives from themes of grief and loss mediated through snow and the cuckoo’s song, to ecological sensibilities in medieval poems and the generosity of the water that drives the water wheel. In a thousand years of poetry, we see the natural world portrayed not as a pristine realm but as a human home.
Above all Carwyn invites us, through these poems, to encounter nature—in a bee, a flower, a lake, or a field of sheep—not in the abstract but in all its sparkling reality.
192 pages | 5.31 x 8.5 | © 2026
Biological Sciences: Natural History
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory