Artist’s statement
At times — although not always — my poetic practice is enacted as a way of taking even ordinary difficulties and, by attending gently and creatively to them, make of them something different, something new. Writing is a way of ‘speaking’, but being less transmutable than speech, it can inscribe into something meaningful what threatens us with annihilation by its sheer, grey meaninglessness (Stewart 1993: 31). It makes something that a reader might respond to, enacting a dialogue of recognition. We all experience dark times, conflict, difficulty and pain: this is part of being alive. Poetry allows me to stay with these feelings, to recognise and shape them in a more positive way through which, perhaps, pain is transmuted. Whether this effect is ‘therapeutic’ is not, however, the main reason for writing this poetry; my focus is on making what is obtuse — not understood, not even known but only sensed as traces of memory and powerful emotion — into poetic form. Without this articulation from experience to aesthetic form, without the process enabling an experimentation with form and language, the process would remain ‘confessional’ and perhaps healing, but it would not satisfy my intention and desire to make something new. It is this newness that is the truly healing aspect of such poetry, as the poetic practice and writing enacts creativity rather than depression.
The poems here are based on my immediate personal experiences, memories, associations, and on encounters with the creative arts of other practitioners and artists. Through these engagements, in dialogue with the works of others, I like to think that my poems might join a community of expressive artists who want to shape experience into something that is more pure and meaningful, using their artistic and poetic practice to enhance knowledge of self and others — and hence creating work that just might increase what seems too often to be the limited quantum of empathy in the world. These poems involve embodied processes of writing, thought and feeling; they bring the elusiveness of memory or fragmented, partial knowing into a present state of language and form that is far more than its origins.
returned
like a homing pigeon
to the garden of a house of locked doors:
mother father departed, their coats with fur collars
for European winters —
a child alone in midsummer
escaped from the billet of another’s care —
comes back like a cat to its home,
to pink columbines and wisteria,
dressed in shorts, shirt and sandals,
the familiar grass prickly brown:
the windows of the house are shut,
the suburb an utter quiet — she can remember
the weight in her — it had happened before,
made her eyes film, the sunlight redundant:
now again like a peach-stone in her stomach
out of sight and mind:
she dips bare feet in the swimming pool,
peach-pit sadness
in the shade of the mulberry tree
red stains on fingers, her mouth
the sour fruit: in the silence of the garden
eleven-year old heart
breaking — a fine-feather tearing
faint as the drift of a leaf from a mulberry branch
dropping onto the paving below.
Highveld morning in Health
Green of rain on leaves all night:
then after-time of darkness
pre-dawn, voices of sparrows,
early weaver birds dart, black-masked
feathered brilliant yellow:
the morning is new and clean
as water — you can smell
chlorophyll, juice of grass blades
the sky softened by the rain.
Brave Face
For my mother d. 2013
A small flame in the storm
this flutter each day and night —
skin loosens, joints tighten to drums
in the light before daybreak
the road seems narrow.
Some days, feathers moult the wooden floor,
her eyes lighter, voice a whisper, the heart
opens wide the ink-prints of its pages.
On the path outside a bird on papery grass,
dead feathers limp, still glossed, blue-black
not yet stiffening — this dry late-winter afternoon
I think of tenacity, of dust.
White Lines III
i
as from great height, look down on how we run
striving, awkward parallels
the messiness of crossings
like rain-soaked roads where
mud never dries — I drag
my feet, suddenly light with shock:
over and over each life
losing itself.
we are wet and pure, our naked wrists
expose themselves again
like leaves after rain
intensely yellow with the gloss
of rain —
as if we are weaving a nest and the yellow shapes
gleam like pieces of foil amidst
sodden threads and grasses,
as if our bright eyes are everything
pushing through darkness
with hope our ant-like paths
manage to climb past the rifts
of our losses: how to tell
in words not sound enough,
the crash of the inner pounding?
lines on a canvas, slashed — dried paint caught in a net of moment
in hot thrust: if we had
no language nor sound,
would we be brutish only
or still run the patterning earth
with irregular, broken
lace-work?
ii
in this night of silence
i cannot deny words unless
like a drying hibiscus flower
i am ready to fall — but nothing is dry
about this green coursing. the clouds passing the moon
tell me i will not be here always,
nor my feet on this muddy path footprinting
the wet grass: one day
sky and leaves will close over like doors to a verandah
moss on terrace stones
will change to white, then pink,
then green again with time –
so the slow tongue-driven, thought-driven words attempt
to fill and deepen
the eyes’ bright windows –
a tentative dialogue.
Based on later viewings of Tony Tuckson’s, White lines (vertical) on ultramarine, AGNSW, a painting which has triggered a number of my poems as well as the title of my last book.
Stewart, S 1993 On longing: Narratives of the miniature, the gigantic, the souvenir, the collection, Durham, NC: Duke