Fishing for Lightning: The Spark of Poetry
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Fishing for Lightning - Sarah Holland-Batt
Sarah Holland-Batt is an award-winning poet, editor and critic, and an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at QUT. Her first book, Aria (UQP, 2008), was the recipient of a number of national literary awards, including the Thomas Shapcott Poetry Prize, the Judith Wright Poetry Prize and the Anne Elder Award, and was shortlisted in both the New South Wales and Queensland Premiers’ Literary Awards for Poetry. Her second book, The Hazards (UQP, 2015), won the 2016 Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Poetry, and was shortlisted for the Kenneth Slessor Poetry Prize in the New South Wales Premier’s Literary Awards, the Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature John Bray Memorial Prize, the Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards and the Queensland Literary Awards. She is the recipient of a Sidney Myer Creative Fellowship, the WG Walker Memorial Fulbright Scholarship, residencies at Yaddo and MacDowell colonies in the United States, the Marten Bequest Travelling Scholarship, an Asialink Literature residency in Japan, and an Australia Council Literature Residency at the BR Whiting Studio in Rome, among other honours.
Also by Sarah Holland-Batt
Poetry
Aria
The Hazards
As editor
The Best Australian Poems 2017
The Best Australian Poems 2016
Fishing for Lightning title pageInhalt
Einführung
World Poetry Day: On Judith Beveridge
Concrete Poetry: On Stuart Cooke
Poetry and Science: On Tricia Dearborn
The Ode: On Jill Jones
Incongruous Pleasures: On Aidan Coleman
The Elegy: On Brendan Ryan
The New Confessionalism: On Omar Sakr
The Sonnet: On Judith Bishop
The Movement of Metaphor: On Anthony Lawrence
The Villanelle: On Sarah Day
The Long Poem: On Peter Boyle
A Poem for Winter: On Tracy Ryan
The Poem’s Speaker: On Prithvi Varatharajan
Mathematics and Constraint: On Jordie Albiston
A History of Place: On Lisa Gorton
Indigenous Poetry: On Fire Front
The Sonnet Sequence: On Keri Glastonbury
The Readymade: On Toby Fitch
Decoding Difficulty: On LK Holt
Animal Language: On Siobhan Hodge
The Sestina: On Michael Farrell
The Fragment: On Antigone Kefala
Influence and Conversation: On Caitlin Maling
Sound and Meter: On Felicity Plunkett
Questions of Style: On Simon West
Repetition and Rhetoric: On Michael Sharkey
Poetry and Witness: On Jennifer Harrison
Symbolism: On Graeme Miles
The Pantoum: On Emma Lew
The Line: On Robert Adamson
The Anagram: On Jaya Savige
The Epistle: On Charmaine Papertalk Green
The Verse Novel: On Luke Best
Lyric Address: On Louise Glück
Ekphrasis: On Laurie Duggan
The Prose Poem: On Maria Takolander
Poetry and Landscape: On Martin Johnston
Formal Verse: On Stephen Edgar
The Epic: On ∏.O.
Myth and Religion: On Norman Erikson Pasaribu
The Verse Biography: On John A Scott
Reclaiming History: On Jeanine Leane
The Haiku: On Beverley Farmer
The Political Poem: On Barry Hill
The Love Poem: On Adrienne Eberhard
The Mystery of Language: On Meredith Wattison
Poetry and Memory: On Todd Turner
The Satirical Impulse: On Ed Wright
Travel Poetry: On Rebecca Edwards
Poetry and Choreography: On Jessica L Wilkinson
Notes on Sources
Acknowledgements
Index
Einführung
When Benjamin Franklin wanted to fly his kite on a Sunday, he used to tie a key on to its string and use a mysterious but convincing-sounding excuse. When asked why he was breaking the Sabbath, Franklin would tell people he wasn’t actually flying a kite, but was instead ‘fishing for lightning’. Awed by the spectre of the great inventor conducting an important experiment, onlookers left Franklin and his kite in peace.
I’ve always thought fishing for lightning – an absurd, eccentric, original, rebellious, secretly joyous act – is a perfect metaphor for what readers of poetry do. To outsiders, reading poetry might look like hard work, but when you get the hang of it, it is exhilarating. As a form, poetry is full of freedom and possibility. It asks the reader to be open to coincidence and association, to music and imagery, to chance and change. Poems are full of surprises: each line is a little detonation of language and imagery, each stanza a series of swift steps into the unknown. Poems and readers conspire together to give a poem its full meaning and resonance; poems are nothing without readers who pay attention.
In this book of short essays on Australian poets, I offer some suggestions about how to learn to pay attention to poetry and what poets do. In these essays, I am writing for readers who are out of touch with poetry, or who want to learn more about it, and even for those who think they hate it, as well as for those who have already found a place for poetry in their lives. Some of these essays focus on opening up and demystifying poetic forms – the elegy, the ode, the sonnet, the villanelle – while others focus on poetic style and techniques. Many also offer some historical context. Poetry is, after all, an ancient art so durable and powerful that it has lasted millennia. Much of what poets do today still connects to prehistoric poetry that was sung and spoken prior to the invention of the written word; where I can, I illuminate those historical links.
The fifty essays in this book were initially published as a poetry column in the Weekend Australian over the course of a year. Each column focuses on an Australian poet’s most recent book, offering an introduction to their work, alongside a poem. In arriving at this idea, I was inspired by poets who have written similar columns decades ago, particularly Robert Hass’s conversational ‘Poet’s Choice’ columns in The Washington Post in the 1990s, and James Fenton’s erudite series on craft for The Guardian in the early 2000s. I was aware that a column on poetry was, in an Australian context, unorthodox; the shrinking arts pages in our papers are devoted, rightly, to criticism and reviews. In spite of this, my editors Tim Douglas and Stephen Romei miraculously gave my somewhat unusual idea the green light – for which I owe them my sincerest thanks.
The column was slated to start in March 2020 – at the very moment the coronavirus pandemic was reshaping our world. Supermarkets were stripped of basic staples, flights were grounded, restrictions and lockdowns put in place. The universe shrank a little; boundaries hardened. At the same time, the lives we would have been leading – the trips we would have taken, the people we would have seen, the weddings and funerals we would have held – seemed to exist in some ghostly parallel dimension, just beyond the field of vision.
‘I have a life that did not become, / that turned aside and stopped, / astonished’ the poet AR Ammons wrote in ‘Easter Morning’, a poem about the diverging possibilities that make up a life. It was a poem I found myself thinking about almost daily during this time, as I, like everyone I knew, began to mourn the phantom life I might otherwise have been living. ‘I hold it in me like a pregnancy or / as on my lap a child / not to grow or grow old but dwell on’, Ammons says. ‘Not to grow or grow old but dwell on’: over the past year of stasis and constraint, this line took on added meaning.
The columns are presented in the order they were published, with minimal revision. As such, they are a portrait of a year of reading, and a sort of time capsule, too. Where I could, I tried to choose poems or books that reflected the seasons, or events in the news – seeking to show readers that poetry can help us make sense of the times we live in.
Perhaps, because so many of us spent a year holed up in our homes with little to do and a lot of time for introspection, the column struck a chord with readers. I received letters from eighty-year-olds who hadn’t read poetry since high school but found themselves clipping poetry out of the paper to read each week, as well as letters from people who had never before understood or enjoyed poetry in their lives. I heard from high school teachers and law professors, from incarcerated inmates and scientists, from farmers and doctors. Readers have shared their own interpretations of the poems I have written about, and their own original poetry; they have sent recipes and memories, recommendations and questions. Finding a moment of calm reading about poetry each week, many said, was helping them through the uncertainty.
Why would readers turn to poetry at a time like this? In trying to answer this question, I am tempted to revert to a familiar defensive stance. Ever since Plato banished poets from his ideal Republic, poets have been playing defence, writing manifestos about how poetry alone can reveal universal truths, transform the imagination, engender morality, spark revolution, and grapple with the sublime and ineffable. These claims might rightly be viewed with suspicion by disbelievers. After all, as Auden famously wrote in his elegy for Yeats, ‘poetry makes nothing happen’.
But perhaps this is precisely the point. Because poetry is an art form that defiantly resists any utilitarian purpose, it makes no claims to do anything to influence the machinations of politics or public life. It is meaningful precisely because it cannot be reduced to its usefulness. It exists defiantly and obstinately outside the world of action.
Yet there is one thing that poetry can be reliably trusted to do: it concentrates the mind and asks us to pay attention. Its clarity echoes in us. The voices of poets can vault across the centuries, bringing chills and solace, beauty and devastation. Poetry at its best achieves a profundity and concision that no other art form can match; it is a firework in the dark whose imprint lingers on the retina, and in the mind, long after it is read.
As the sampling I have collected here in these essays shows, Australian poets today write inventively in every form conceivable about the mosaic landscapes and animal life that make up our continent, about colonisation, migration and environmental catastrophe, about the internet age and AI, politics, art and science, the pleasures of daily life, and the terror and mystery of mortality. Their work is by turns playful, ironic, terse, expansive, ardent and comic. I hope you enjoy fishing for lightning among their lines, as I have.
World Poetry Day: On Judith Beveridge
Amid the bewildering array of so-called international celebrations carrying on weekly, you could be forgiven for not knowing that World Poetry Day falls on 21 March. But unlike International Talk Like a Pirate Day, World Emoji Day – or even, I might sacrilegiously suggest, Ice Cream for Breakfast Day – an international day in praise of poetry is an occasion worth observing.
Listening to a poet espouse the benefits of poetry is probably a bit like being on the receiving end of a hawker’s soliloquy at a flea market: reasonable grounds for scepticism. So, by all means, don’t take my word for it: consider the science. Neurologists at Exeter University, using MRI technology, found that reading poetry activated different brain regions to prose – even the lyrical prose we find in fiction. When the research participants read poetry, it lit up the regions of the brain variously linked to emotion, memory, making sense of music, coherence building and moral decision-making. Poetry, the study’s authors concluded, induces a more introspective, reflective mental state among readers than prose.
These findings are no accident: they are entirely aligned to poets’ aims. Poets intend for their poems to move the reader. They exploit the nuances of language. They condense complex emotions and ideas into the most concise possible phrasing. They aim for musical effects, too, through rhyme, rhythm and meter. Like a song, a poem can be heard and understood in a single sitting. It can also be memorised exactly – and is designed to be remembered and repeated. For all these reasons, poetry has endured as one of our oldest literary forms, stretching back to antiquity, where it was sung by the Ancient Greeks accompanied by the lyre. Since, it has stubbornly clung on when so many other literary forms have fallen away.
In our era of distracted reading, poetry also offers us an antidote to the endless scrolling and skimming, and a respite from the social media morass – as well as our burgeoning inboxes. Corporate culture has a lot to answer for, but perhaps its greatest crime is its relentless emphasis on maximising efficiency: we are all under ever-increasing pressure to do more faster, to read text quickly and often distractedly. Taking the time to sit and read poetry might therefore feel indulgent – insurrectionary, even. But we’ve got to rediscover the pleasures of analogue reading if we have any hope of salvaging our attention spans.
Judith Beveridge is a poet whose work compels a slow and attentive reading; her poems are intensely focused on detail, baroque in style and often seek to embroider a single moment in ornate language. Beveridge is well-known for being a forensic observer of the natural world, with a highly attuned musical ear and a gift for crystalline imagery. These lines, from her poem ‘Flying Foxes, Wingham Brush’, give a sense of her precise, startling images:
Some of the bats are elbowing their way
along the branches, a collection of broken
business umbrellas. Some hang like charred
pods, or look like furry oriental fruit
wrapped in silk sashes. Others are handling
the stretch of their black elastomer wings
as carefully as women checking for snags
in their stockings, ready to step out for the night.
This stream of vivid metaphors and similes, one after the other, is the sort of thing Beveridge does effortlessly – but the specificity of these metaphors and the clarity with which we, as readers, are able to imagine and visualise them is the result of her expert craftsmanship. You’ll notice that Beveridge lingers on the sensory detail and textures, focusing not only on visual qualities – the shapes of broken business umbrellas she sees in the flying foxes’ silhouettes – but also on textures, too: their silken wings that are silken as women’s stockings, and the matted texture of their fur. The result is a kind of synaesthesia, where the senses are all engaged simultaneously.
It’s easy to be dazzled by Beveridge’s imagery but, underneath their immensely satisfying surfaces, her poems frequently hinge on startling revelations that detonate almost belatedly. Her poem ‘Dusk’ is a perfect example of this. It begins by describing a praying mantis’s wobbly predation of a caterpillar, whose prickly fur is described spectacularly as a skein of wool beaded with dew. As the mantis teeters into view, it’s anthropomorphised in musical terms: it’s on the verge of shimmying or break-dancing, extending its arms like a conductor, before it strikes. Beveridge, again, alerts us not only to the visual but also the aural: through the use of consonance in her repeating a hard ‘k’ in ‘stalking’, ‘micro-nicking’, ‘black’, ‘back’, ‘skein’ and ‘wicking’, we hear the caterpillar nipping its way along the jasmine vine.
The joyous eclecticism of Beveridge’s descriptions distracts us from what’s really being described: a hunting ritual. Darkness looms in the poem’s very last word and, we suspect, carnage explodes just after the poem ends. It’s at this point we realise the caterpillar is also, perhaps, a figure for we humans, and our own oblivious chugging along our proverbial branches. As we circle back to the poem’s deceptively simple title, we see that the impending dusk becomes metaphorical: a dying of the light. All of these meanings shift into place with Beveridge’s last word, no sooner. It’s the sort of brilliant trickery that only a poem can do.
21 March 2020
Dusk
Judith Beveridge
A praying mantis is stalking a caterpillar
micro-nicking its way along the jasmine.
Close up, the caterpillar is as black
and furry as mould on ten-day-old bread –
move back, it’s a teased-out skein of wool
wicking the evening dew.
Suddenly the mantis pulls up its knees,
rests its serrated feet against its abdomen
and intensely rocks – it looks
as if it’s about to shimmy, or break-dance
on spring-loaded legs. Then it stops,
waits, steadies its head, calms its quivering
body – a compass needle aligning north.
Next it holds out its arms as if it were
about to take up a baton … The caterpillar
is shuffling, a slow boogaloo, pulling
no burden, except its unperceived death.
Concrete Poetry: On Stuart Cooke
One of the most memorable pieces of wildlife footage aired in any David Attenborough documentary is of an Australian native songbird, the superb lyrebird, doing its thing in a patch of scrub. So named because its curlicued tail-feathers evoke the lyre – the stringed instrument that Ancient Greeks used to strum to accompany their poetry – the lyrebird also evokes its homonym, the ‘liar’ bird, through its mimicking song. As Attenborough crouches behind a tree trunk, a male lyrebird strolls through the undergrowth, then stops in a clearing to sing. It reels fluently through a bewildering assortment of other bird calls, including the iconic songs of the kookaburra and whipbird. Mixed into its extraordinary recitation are human noises, too: the sound of a camera’s shutter, a car alarm and, tragically, the sound of loggers revving up chainsaws as they fell the native forest that forms its habitat.
Another image of lyrebirds has been doing the rounds lately: a photograph of the usually solitary birds clustered all together around a tiny dam near Wollombi in New South Wales during the catastrophic bushfires of 2019–2020. The birds were drinking and sheltering from the approaching fire front. While renowned for their survival instincts and known to adopt clever strategies to make it through fires, the lyrebird’s prognosis is grim: Birdlife Australia estimates that the tree species of lyrebird in Australia have lost, between them, somewhere between a third and half of all their known habitat. The lyrebird – which fossil records date back an astonishing fifteen million years – is now tipped to become a threatened species.
The lyrebird is the totemic animal of Stuart Cooke’s Lyre: a book that can perhaps be read as a descendant of sorts of Les Murray’s classic volume of animal poems, Translations from the Natural World. Cooke gathers together his menagerie of animals both wild and domesticated – from the tarsier to the manta ray, the housefly to the humble stray cat – and, like a lyrebird, tunes into the strange language of each, finding a wonderful and bizarre lexicon that makes a human attempt to listen and replicate the songs of the natural world.
In inventing these animal languages, Cooke draws on a rich humus of linguistic sources: English and Indigenous languages and terminology drawn from anthropology, geomorphology, science and physics jostle with colloquial vernacular and words the poet has invented himself. For example, Cooke uses an unusual and, as far as I can tell, invented form of address: ‘youm’ and ‘yourm’ – you and your, with an ‘m’ added at the end – that has the effect of a kind of mantra, a cyclical om or hum that runs throughout the book. Often within a single line, Cooke oscillates between the surreal, the scientific and sheer music: in one poem, sand bubbler crabs produce ‘pearl balloons with scrapped pasts’; in another, a king parrot ‘chuckle[s] in dripping sclerophyll’. Cooke also makes fantastic linguistic leaps: a gecko, he tells us, is known alternately as ‘Japanese tokek / Philippino tuko / tokkae in Malay a mating / croak, token, gekk-gekk’. Elsewhere, the poet describes how the lyrebird of the book’s title ‘link[s] cattle bell with kettle boil’ in its song.
Cooke’s ability to flick between linguistic registers in this way may be because he is a translator as well as a poet; he has also published a translation of the Argentinian poet Gianni Siccardi’s final collection, The Blackbird, as well as a translation of an Indigenous song cycle from the West Kimberley, Bulu Line, by George Dyungayan.
Sometimes, Cooke’s bower-birded, bricolaged language dissolves into joyful gibberish, as in the poem ‘Albert’s Lyrebird’, which apes the lyrebird’s mashed-up song, designed to impress the female of the species. When it spots a potential mate, Cooke’s lyrebird rolls out its best material:
sweee-sweee-sweee, here she
comes cherrblat cherrblat walkie-
talkie rapid squelch, the vegetation
synchronised systematically with
walkie-talkie doodles, shimmered symmetrically
with chatter, chuff melody, bubbled
R2-D2 electro squelp, boiling static
popping, if the vines
and sticks are dry, a top-tapping, a wild ditty
Once you get past the initial oddity of this word-hoard, you realise that while Cooke’s mimicry of a lyrebird’s love song might not make sense semantically, it does sonically. This passage is uncannily like the lyrebird’s quickfire trilling and is especially fun to read aloud. This ‘wild ditty’ encourages you to abandon sense in favour of sound; it reminds me of Archibald MacLeish’s famous dictum: ‘A poem should not mean / But be.’
The poems in Lyre are unusually long, spanning many pages each. The unusual