Poetry Shelf Playing favourites: Cadence Chung

Black Opium

Coleridge wrote his best poems in a poppyseed haze.
I’m not sure about those tiles, he said from my bathtub,
looking up at the ceiling. I had no idea what he was thinking:
my only experience with opium was the YSL perfume, that
pungent amber stuff that always sat on my mother’s dressing table.
And then later, the redesigned Black Opium, an awful
vanilla-sugar thing I wore to class with a scratch on my wrist,
angled and shallow like a cat might have done it. When I came
home, Coleridge was alight. He showed me the poem
he’d written, wet with tap-drip. I know it is but a Dream,
yet feel more anguish than if it were Truth, he told me.
In my own visions, cross-hatched and foggy though they are,
I can still make out the shape of you.

Cadence Chung
Originally published in Cordite Issue 114

I wrote this strange little poem while taking a course on Romantic poetry. In one lecture, we were shown a quote from one of Keats’ letters, describing a conversation he had with Coleridge:

‘I walked with him at his alderman-after dinner pace for near two miles I suppose. In those two miles he broached a thousand things [ . . . ]—Nightingales, Poetry—on Poetical sensation—Metaphysics—Different genera and species of Dreams—Nightmare—a dream accompanied [with] a sense of touch—single and double touch—A dream related—First and second consciousness—the difference explained between will and Volition—so many metaphysicians from a want of smoking the second consciousness—Monsters—the Kraken—Mermaids—Southey believes in them—Southey’s belief too much diluted—A ghost story—Good morning—I heard his voice as he came towards me—I heard his voice as he moved away—I had heard it all the interval—if it may be called so’ (letters, 15-16 April 1819).

My friend Jackson McCarthy and I thought this was the most hilarious little passage, even though I’m sure nobody else in the course did. It made me feel a fondness for Coleridge, an almost jovial sense of camaraderie with him. In my mind, he’d gone from a serious and canonical Romantic poet to a strange uncle, or a messy friend who would text you, drunk, at midnight, with details of the evening’s disastrous escapades. He seemed the sort of man who really could sit in my bathtub high out of his mind. A lot of my poetry interacts with canons in this way; I like to think of all those old poets and characters as my friends.

Talking about opium in the course made me think of my mum’s little bottle of the YSL perfume called Opium, which was a constant fixture in my childhood remembrances of her dressing-table, always in the background while she did her makeup. I don’t think she ever really used it — it was a tiny bottle that I think was genuinely from when the perfume first came out — and it absolutely reeked. I don’t think they make it like that anymore. The 2014 Black Opium is a disappointingly safe shadow of that original concoction; sweet and vanillary and with that unidentifiable chemical undertone that all modern designer perfumes seem to have. I’m sure you could say something there about mass production, evolving beauty standards, unoriginality under late capitalism, etc.

But anyway. The poem took me a while to figure out, especially in terms of what Coleridge would actually say to me. The final sentence was changed around 5 times. Jackson has now taught this poem twice in one of his guest lectures about ways to end poems, as an example of a volta. I’m pretty sure that term traces back to the verb ‘to turn’, but it also reminds one of voltage, to a sudden spark that creates a change. Black Opium is concerned with many things — perfume, dreams, visions — but then suddenly turns to the lyric, to the you that is there in the background of any poem.

Cadence Chung is a poet, mezzo-soprano, and composer, currently one of the resident artists at Te Pae Kōkako – The Aotearoa New Zealand Opera Studio. She has released three books: anomalia (Tender Press, 2022), Mythos: an Audio-Visual Anthology of Art by Young New Zealanders, (ed.) (Wai-te-Ata Press, 2024), and Mad Diva (Otago University Press, 2025). She also edits Symposia Magazine and the New Zealand Poetry Society’s quarterly magazine, a fine line.

Poetry Shelf Monday poem: The little bird sings to me by Bernadette Hall

The little bird sings to me

sometimes I have to talk
like this out of both sides of my mouth
            rio rio rio

sometimes you are light
like harakeke, the whisper of it
            rio rio rio

sometimes you are heavy
like the blood oath of pounamu
            rio rio rio

I sit in silence at the top of the tree
angry voices rise up all around me
            rio rio rio

I can see you standing in the middle of the field
you are ankle deep in mud
                                               you are blowing on a whistle
            rio rio rio

Bernadette Hall

This is a new poem, a bit of a surprise to me. I have been working more in prose recently. On March 17 at the City Art Gallery in Ōtautahi Christchurch, my YA short story ‘The Girl Who Was Swallowed by Ice and Snow’ will be launched. It is a collaboration with the Dunedin artist, Kathryn Madill,  1,800 words from me and 17 paintings from her. Set in an Antarctic dreamscape, it explores the phenomenon of silence, the kind of silence the young can vanish into. To save themselves. As I did when my dad died in front of me when I was 16 years old. His Irish heart giving out. So it has taken me 22 years to make this artwork. How wonderful to celebrate the making now with Kathryn.

The launch of The Girl who Was Swallowed by Ice and Snow, Bernadette Hall and Kathryn Madill collaboration, March 17th.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: NZPS International Poetry Competition

𝐖𝐞 𝐚𝐫𝐞 𝐨𝐟𝐟 & 𝐫𝐮𝐧𝐧𝐢𝐧𝐠!! 𝐎𝐮𝐫 𝐩𝐨𝐩𝐮𝐥𝐚𝐫 𝐚𝐧𝐧𝐮𝐚𝐥 𝐩𝐨𝐞𝐭𝐫𝐲 𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐭𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐢𝐬 𝐨𝐩𝐞𝐧 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐛𝐮𝐬𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬𝐬. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐭𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐫𝐮𝐧𝐬 𝐟𝐫𝐨𝐦 𝐌𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝟏𝟓 𝐭𝐨 𝐌𝐚𝐲 𝟑𝟏.

Go to our website to find out about the judges, the categories you can enter, and the prize money. (Did we mention there are cash prizes?!).

Winners & placegetters in the four categories (Open, Open Junior, Haiku, Haiku Junior) are automatically included in our equally popular anthology. This year’s editor is Anne Kennedy!! Anne will also select poems for inclusion in the anthology.

So there are heaps of reasons to enter!

If you have any questions about the competition, email us info@poetrysociety.org.nz

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Bernadette Hall and Kathryn Madill launch/opening

Catalyst is so excited to attend this launch event and we’d love to see you all there too! A new book by our legendary Bernadette Hall is a special event and when it’s a fully painted gothic fable twenty years in the making, it becomes unmissable. Please join us for this very special launch event at City Art Depot on Tuesday 17th March from 5.30pm.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Featherston Booktown Karutatea Festival

One of my favourite festivals as both attendee and participant has a great 2026 programme under its new director, Jordan Hamel.

This year’s festival has some terrific poetry events along with a feast of fiction and nonfiction.

Go here for programme details.

Would love to be in the audience for this one for a start:

And then again would so love to be in the audience for these . . . and do Claire Mabey’s nature trail!

Poetry Shelf celebrates the Ockham NZ Book Awards Poetry Shortlist: Some favourite things with Anna Jackson

Terrier, Worrier A Poem in Five Parts, Anna Jackson
Auckland University Press, 2025

“Anna Jackson’s glorious new collection, Terrier, Worrier A Poem in Five Parts, gets sunlight slipping through the loops of my thinking, reading, dreaming. The collection is offered as a seasonal loop as we move through summer, autumn, winter, spring, summer, and in this temporal movement, the loop regenerates, absorbing and delivering rhythms of living . . . mind and body . . . rhythms of writing . . . nouns, verbs, conjunctions . . . rhythms of thinking . . . and little by little . . . the compounding ideas, the feelings. It’s poetry as looptrack: overloop, underloop, throughloop.”

Paula Green, Poetry Shelf

To celebrate placement on The Ockham NZ Book Awards poetry shortlist, I invited the four poets to choose some favourite things. First up Anna Jackson.

Four photos
(a favourite object, place, book cover, album)

my mix-tape cd collection is a favourite thing!

my favourite place would be, in bed, with the cat

Thee sets of three

3 things that matter to me in poetry: I like surprise, a twist that goes somewhere unexpected but not random. I like repetition, the way it builds memory into a poem.  And voice, I love it when I hear emotion in the way something is said.

3 poets who have inspired me: Catullus, obviously, but not counting Catullus, Frank O’Hara, Wislawa Symborska, Helen Rickerby. 

One question

Why does Terrier, Worrier matter to me? 

Terrier, Worrier is made up of thoughts I was thinking during the Covid lockdowns and at the time I felt some urgency to write them down and not forget them, which was a very temporary impulse.  I don’t write down thoughts any more. But then I had what felt like raw material, that I wanted to work with the way you might want to work with clay or with fabric samples you’d collected.  I felt like using them up.  And I like what I made out of them. 

An extract from Terrier, Worrier

I remember sitting in the car after work, not wanting to turn on the windshield wipers because I felt like I needed the rain on the windshield to do the work of crying for me. 

I thought, every body is a memory palace. 

I dreamed I was in conversation with a photographer who had been photographing a series of traumatic scenes, a series of photographs both terrible and beautiful.  But, before he could exhibit them, before he could even print them, he exposed all the film, and all the images were lost.  Now, he wondered, did he have to go through everything again, re-enact the scenes, in order to recreate the images?

I thought, I don’t know why I translate Catullus over and over again, but it happens and I feel it, I feel like I am split in two. 

I thought, when I am Catullus, writing as Sappho, as Ariadne, as Attis, as Procne, am I bird or birdsong?  The journey, or the backwards glance?

I sat in the car with my daughter, tears running down our faces.  Then I laughed, and turned the windscreen wipers off.

Anna Jackson
from Terrrier, Worrier 

Anna Jackson is the author of seven collections of poetry as well as Diary Poetics: Form and Style in Writers’ Diaries 1915–1962 (Routledge, 2010) and Actions & Travels: How Poetry Works (Auckland University Press, 2022). She lives in Island Bay, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, and is professor in English literature at Te Herenga Waka  Victoria University of Wellington.

Anna Jackson’s website
Auckland University Press page
Poetry Shelf review
Anna and Paula in conversation on Poetry Shelf
Anna chooses an extract from Terrier, Worrier (longlist feature)

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Poetry in the Garden

Katherine Mansfield House & Garden

We had such a good time last year, we’re doing it again! Join us at Poetry in the Garden on Sunday 22 March at 2pm for readings by Anna Jackson, Leah Dodd, Gregory Kan, Freya Turnbull, James Brown, Helen Rickerby and Hinemoana Baker.

We’re crossing everything for fine weather like last year which saw people arrive with parasols, hats, picnics and drinks!

Poetry Shelf Cafe Readings: James Brown

New Days for Old: prose poems, James Brown
Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2026

To celebrate the publication of his new poetry book, New Days for Old, James Brown talks poetry and reads from the collection.

‘How does James Brown do it? Every page in this book is my favourite.’
Bill Manhire

“First up, I love the feel, shape and look of James Brown’s new poetry collection. Secondly, I love the title: New Days for Old. Thirdly, I love the choice of genre: a sequence of prose poems. And finally I love the opening quotation: ‘Much of the greatest art, I find, seeks to remind us of the obvious.’ (Patrick Bringley, All the Beauty in the World: A Museum Guide’s Adventures in Life, Loss and Art).
I tip the quotation on its heels, borrow the word beauty, and get caught in a thinking whirlpool of beauty and wonder, the obvious and the ordinary. I am sidetrailed into musing on the small in the large as much as the large in the small. Nothing like a glorious poetry eddy to get your senses tingling.”
Paula Green (from forthcoming review)

James reads from New Days for Old

James Brown describes himself as ‘a Sunday poet who fell in with the wrong crowd’. His poetry collections are New Days for Old (2026), Slim Volume (2024), The Tip Shop (2022), Selected Poems (2020), Floods Another Chamber (2017), Warm Auditorium (2012), The Year of the Bicycle (2006), which was a finalist in the Montana New Zealand Book Awards 2007, Favourite Monsters (2002), Lemon (1999), and Go Round Power Please (1996), which won the Best First Book Award for Poetry.

James has been the recipient of several writing fellowships and residencies, including the 1994 Louis Johnson New Writers Bursary (1994) and a share of the 2000 Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship, the Canterbury University Writer in Residence (2001). He edited The Nature of Things: Poems from the New Zealand Landscape (Craig Potton, 2005), the literary magazine Sport from 1993 to 2000, and Best New Zealand Poems 2008. In 2002, as Dr Ernest M. Bluespire, he published the useful booklet Instructions for Poetry Readings (Braunias University Press). In 2018, James created what he calls ‘a transcribed poem’ out of Herbert Morrison’s famous radio commentary of the Hindenburg disaster: ‘Hindenburg: A transcribed poem’, and also produced the small booklet Songs of the Humpback Whale. In 2019, Alan Gregg, formerly of the band the Mutton Birds, turned two of James’s poems (‘Shrinking Violet’ and ‘Peculiar Julia’) into songs.

James works as an editor and teaches the Poetry Workshop at the International Institute of Modern Letters at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington.

Te Herenga Waka University page

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: Poetry at AWF 2026

Here are five poetry events on offer at AWF 2026 along with The Ockham Book Awards event where the poetry winner will be announced.

Check full programme here

Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry: Nafanua Purcell Kersel (Satupa‘itea, Faleālupo, Aleipata, Tuaefu); Sophie van Waardenberg; Erik Kennedy; Anna Jackson

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2026 Honoured Writer Bill Manhire

A short programme blurb can’t do justice to Bill Manhire’s immense contribution to the country’s literary landscape.

He was Aotearoa New Zealand’s inaugural poet laureate, has won the Ockham NZ Book Award for Poetry five times, and founded and directed the International Institute of Modern Letters at Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington, from which countless of the nation’s finest writers have emerged.

We are thrilled to be recognising Manhire as the Festival’s 2026 Honoured Writer, and have him join a list of luminaries including Witi Ihimaera, CK Stead, Patricia Grace, Joy Cowley, Fiona Kidman, Anne Salmond and Gavin Bishop.

While Manhire is unable to attend, Fergus Barrowman will lead a wide-ranging session about Bill’s extraordinary life in letters and his major new collection, Lyrical Ballads.

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Masterclass

Emma Neale is one of our most celebrated poets. She was awarded the Lauris Edmond Memorial Award for a Distinguished Contribution to New Zealand Poetry in 2020 and her sixth collection Liar, Liar, Lick, Spit won the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry at the 2025 Ockham NZ Book Awards.

In this practical and engaging workshop, Neale will help you find your way into a poem – and how to stay on course once you’ve begun.

Through guided writing exercises, you’ll generate first drafts, before turning to the art of self-editing, learning about common pitfalls that Neale encounters as an editor.

You’ll gain insights into how to craft poems that truly lift – and truly land.

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Dreaming for the Ocean in Us: Tangata Moana Writers and Desire

A bold, intimate conversation exploring Pacific writing beyond expectation and what writers are reaching for when they choose desire as a compass. Tusiata Avia, Amber Esau, and Danielle Kionasina Dilys Thomson with Ruby Macomber.

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Hot Takes, Sharp Lines: A Spoken Word Round Table

Poetry, mischief and unforgettable storytelling featuring poet baddies Dominic Hoey, Mr Meaty Boy (Ngāti Porou, Ngāpuhi), Liam Jacobson (Kāi Tahu), Amber Esau (Ngāpuhi, Manase) and Michael Pedersen.


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Love Won, Love Lost, Love Burned Up in Flames

Hearts soaring, hearts broken and everything in between. Seven writers tell intimate, passionate, uplifting, devastating stories of love. Including Matariki Bennett and Michael Bennett.