Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Jack Ross picks Rilke’s ‘Panther’

Some thoughts on Rilke’s ‘Panther

Rainer Maria Rilke, a young Czech-German poet, moved to Paris in 1902. He worked there for a while as the great sculptor Auguste Rodin’s secretary. It was a difficult time for Rilke, a time he later tried to recreate in his autobiographical novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge., about a Danish student adrift in the immense, alien city. Rilke, too, was dissatisfied with most of the work he’d done to date, but couldn’t yet settle on a new direction for his poetry.

Paris, in the early 1900s, was a hotbed of Modernism. Exposure to these new ideas had both a stimulating and a paralysing effect on Rilke. At Rodin’s atelier he met artists and writers of all kinds, but their own certainties only left him more in doubt.

One day (or so the story goes) he was bemoaning his fate to his boss Rodin – in particular his inability to write anything of substance. Rodin replied, “Why don’t you do what I do? When I get stuck on something, I go for a walk with my sketchbook, then just sit down and draw something. You should try it.”

“But I’m a poet,” complained Rilke. “Poets don’t do sketches. We wait for inspiration to come, then write a poem.” Rodin shrugged his shoulders. “Why wait? Go out and sketch something with words.”

What did he have to lose? Why not give it a go? Rilke, already – in his late twenties – a bit set in his ways, reluctantly agreed to go out with a pad and pencil, and try to find something to describe.

Eventually he found his way into the Jardin des Plantes, the zoological gardens. The first cage he sat down in front of held a panther. This was the result:

Der Panther
The Panther

Im Jardin des Plantes, Paris
In the Botanical Gardens, Paris
Sein Blick ist vom Vorübergehn der Stäbe
His gaze is from the passing of the bars
so müd geworden, daß er nichts mehr hält.
grown so tired, that it can hold no more.
Ihm ist, als ob es tausend Stäbe gäbe
It seems to him, as if there were a thousand bars
und hinter tausend Stäben keine Welt.
and behind the thousand bars no world.

Der weiche Gang geschmeidig starker Schritte,
The soft passing of supple strong strides
der sich im allerkleinsten Kreise dreht,
which draw him in the smallest of circles
ist wie ein Tanz von Kraft um eine Mitte,
is like a dance of might around a centre
in der betäubt ein großer Wille steht.
in which a great will stands stunned.

Nur manchmal schiebt der Vorhang der Pupille
Only sometimes does the curtain of the pupil
sich lautlos auf –. Dann geht ein Bild hinein,
lift itself silently – then a picture enters,
geht durch der Glieder angespannte Stille –
passes through the tense stillness of the limbs –
und hört im Herzen auf zu sein.
and comes to an end in the heart.

Rainer Maria Rilke, 1903
[literal version: Jack Ross]

It may well be the most famous poem Rilke ever wrote. The intensity with which he described the panther’s frustration at being locked up in such a narrow space, with no possible escape, pacing round and round forever, must surely have had something in it of his own feelings at being penned in a foreign city, unable to write, unable to form real connections, at a complete loss.

After that, he went out every day and wrote down descriptions of what he saw. There was no more waiting at home for inspiration. The result, eventually, was a collection called simply Neue Gedichte [New Poems], which helped to revolutionise not only his own poetry, but European poetry in general.

But, through it all, that sense of imprisonment, of melancholy, of the need to escape from confinement still speaks through his poem. There are many translations of it, in many languages. Some reproduce the original rhymes and pentameter lines precisely; others take a freer approach: concentrating on what they themselves can draw from the poem, how it intersects with their own lives.

I, too, have been a stranger in a strange land, have felt that sense of loneliness, confinement, and loss. But the suffering of the Panther dwarfs all that, putting it in brutal perspective.

Here’s my own attempt to get across something of Rilke’s poem:

The Panther
in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris

His eyes have grown so tired of watching
bars they can’t see anything
beyond them    bars    a thousand bars
no world no rest outside him nothing

the narrow circle of his steps
carries him around again
dancing to the silent beat
that pins his will inside this pen

once in a while the pupils open
take a snapshot    pass it through
the shuttered stillness of his body
to the heart it answers to

Jack Ross, 2026


Jack Ross
’s latest book of short stories, Haunts, came out from Lasavia Publishing in 2024. A new poetry collection, Tesseract, is due out later this year. He lives with his wife, crafter and art-writer Bronwyn Lloyd, in in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Starling submissions open

Submissions are currently open for Starling Issue 22! 🌀 If you’re an Aotearoa writer under the age of 25, we would love to hear from you.

Send us up to six poems, or up to two prose pieces (each up to a 5,000 word maximum), including short stories, creative non-fiction, personal essays, or anything else you’d like to surprise us with (and we do love to be surprised!).

🎉 Submissions close Friday 10 April. Further detail around how to submit can be found here

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Lynn Jenner new launch date

We are excited to announce that we have rescheduled our special Kerikeri book launch for The Gum Trees of Kerikeri by Lynn Jenner. To be launched by Kim Martins and proudly sponsored by the @nzpoetrysociety. All welcome! We hope to all see you there! 💙

Main Hall, The Cornerstone Church, 144 Kerikeri Road

Saturday 18 April, 2pm – 4:00pm

Kai and refreshments provided

Please RSVP before the 14 April: publicity@otago.ac.nz

Event page

Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Talia Marshall

The first rope

S/he was wading in the river

buoyed by the intuition

there is only water between the sky

and the whenua and this wai

is how they talk to each other

afterwards they lit a fire

and fried leftover boiled potatoes in brown butter

using her kuia’s pan, when it was time for sleep

her hair was in the way of him

so she split it in three and

crossed one kelpy strand over the other

so he could take it apart over and over

in the morning he wears a top knot

where her braid used to be


Talia Marshall
from I hold you to me by a thread series on Substack

Talia Marshall (Ngāti Kuia, Rangitāne o Wairau, Ngāti Rārua, Ngāti Takihiku) is a Dunedin-based writer. She has had work published in Poetry magazine, Landfall, Sport, North & South, Mana, Canvas, The Spinoff, Newsroom, Pantograph Punch and with City Gallery. In 2020 she was the inaugural Emerging Māori Writer in Residence at the IIML at Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington, and in 2021 she won the Newsroom Surrey Hotel Writers Residency. Whaea Blue (2024) is her first book.

The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy stillness wonder movement of a poem.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Judge for The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems


International Writers’ Workshop NZ Inc

iww-writers@outlook.com iww.co.nz

Janet Newman to judge $1000 Poetry Prize

International Writers’ Workshop NZ Inc (IWW) is delighted to announce that Janet Newman is the judge of The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems in 2026. The $1000 Prize, which is for a sequence of completely unpublished poems with a common link or theme, has been made possible by a bequest from the late Jocelyn Grattan in memory of her mother Kathleen. 

Janet lives in Horowhenua. She won the 2014 and 2016 Journal of New Zealand Literature Prize for NZ Literary Studies, the 2015 New Zealand Poetry Society International Poetry Competition, The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems in 2017 and was a runner-up in the 2019 Kathleen Grattan Award. She has a Master of Creative Writing and a PhD in English from Massey  University. Her poetry collection, Unseasoned Campaigner (OUP, 2021), won the 2022 NZSA Heritage Book Award for Poetry. She is an editor of Koe: An Aotearoa ecopoetry anthology (OUP, 2024).

Image credit: Melissa Maguire Photography

The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems is free for IWW members to enter however it is very easy for aspiring poets and writers to join IWW by the third Tuesday in June (16 June 2026) to be eligible to enter the competition. Submissions open on 1 September 2026 and close on 6 October 2026. The winner will be announced on Tuesday 17 November 2026.

Janet will host a one-hour preparatory Workshop, via Zoom, at 11am on Tuesday 5 May 2026 where she will include readings from her winning sequence Tender. This Workshop is free for IWW members. Non-members are welcome to attend the Workshop for $10 and can register by emailing iww-writers@outlook.com

IWW, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary in July, has run The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems since its inception in 2009. The rules for the Prize, past judges and winners, details of how to join IWW, meeting times and other activities of the Workshop, are available from the IWW website: iww.co.nz

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: A Big Night In with the New Zealand Poet Laureate

Toitoi – Assembly Ballroom, 101 Hastings Street South, Hastings

Saturday 11 April 2026 7:30pm – 9:30pm

Join us for a wonderful evening of words with New Zealand’s Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan and his guests, poets Amber Esau, Kiri Piahana-Wong, Ariana Tikao and Anna Jackson. An evening not to be missed!

A Big Night In is the evening event in the very special literary celebrations for the NZ Poet Laureate in Hawke’s Bay. Robert will bring the handcrafted tokotoko he receives from the official ceremony at Matahiwi Marae earlier in the day, his favourite poems and extraordinary friends to this celebration of talent.

We’re thrilled to welcome 2026 Ockham finalist and local poet Nafanua Purcell Kersel (Satupa‘itea, Faleālupo, Aleipata, Tuaefu) as our MC.

Doors open at 7pm.

Presented by Hawke’s Bay Readers & Writers Trust and The National Library of New Zealand.

Robert Sullivan is Aotearoa New Zealand’s current Poet Laureate. He belongs to Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Manu, Ngāti Hau / Ngāti Kaharau) and Kāi Tahu (Kāti Huirapa ki Puketeraki) iwi and is also of Irish descent. His ninth book of poems, Hopurangi / Songcatcher (AUP) was shortlisted for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award at the 2025 Ockham NZ Book Awards. He has won many awards for his poetry, editing, and writing for children.
His poetry speaks to an idealised, empowered New Zealand society for all and addresses the people who live there in the future.
Robert is Associate Professor in Creative Writing at Massey University, and is current President of the NZ Poetry Society / Te Rōpū Toikupu o Aotearoa. He lives in Ōamaru.

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Clearing by Emma Neale

Clearing                                                                               

To get away from the all too much of myself,
I push out on a walk through winter-scoured streets,
wish I’d timed it better—say, for when school was out:

local footpath turned small carnival,
the glossy new brush tips of children’s voices
stretched high to glaze the clouds in lickable colours

like that afternoon I saw twins slow toe-to-heeling
as if a pint glass quaked on a tray on their heads,
as they carried matchstick galleons stapled to paper seas;

or the time the street stopped around the concentration
of another boy, skipping: his avid focus
like a pianist entering flow;

or even the day I saw the small girl at her front gate,
her cries green and broken as she held a savaged nest
that let float feathers like petals of black blood.

But now the air tightens on the edge of snow.
It is close to dusk.
There is nobody much about.

A younger self roams under my ribs.
Hungry, scavenging along a basalt sea cliff,
it shuffles to the edge of desolate.

An ice-knuckled wind rakes the tops of skeletal trees
so I glance across — see, through a rental’s window,
a large room filled with balloons.

Pearly, silver,
or ballet-slipper pink,
they press up against the ceiling.

Newly discovered star cluster,
they glow like silk in firelight

or like dozens of bubbles risen
to a cava glass’s rim,

where they quiver, words that flew the coop of the heart
yet still long to leap from the tip of the tongue.

In an instant, I’m warmed, laughing quietly to no-one
at the ludicrous lengths, the sweet excess

that love can go to
and I’m swept up, sailing clear

along the night’s opened channel, mind reset
by a stranger’s rosy zodiac.

Emma Neale

Emma Neale is a writer and editor who lives in Ōtepoti/Dunedin. Her collection Liar, Liar, Lick, Spit won the Mary and Peter Biggs Prize for Poetry at the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards for 2025; the year she was also awarded the Janet Frame Prize. Her new novel, Maybe Baby, is due out from Bateman Books in May 2026.

Poetry Shelf review: New Days for Old by James Brown

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

In my country of origin, far across the sea, the women
sweep the floors with what you would call broomsticks.
These are effective until their ends begin to fray and snap,
creating more debris than they clean away. This was also
the problem with our government, which is why my
father disguised us as suitcases and brought us here.

James Brown
from New Days for Old: prose poems

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 was 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.

The opening prose poem is like a trinket box, like I’m entering a prose poem, a pocket narrative that is strange and unsettling all in one breath, that is finger tapping magic realism maybe, dystopian fiction, an arcing life story, the addictive openness of a Bill Manhire poem, and not to forget, never to forget, the brutal reality 2026.

On the back of the book Bill claims every poem in the book as his favourite, and I agree. It feels like I am in a unique treasure shop and I am agog with wonder, picking every prose poem up and holding it to the light to see it spin and shift and sparkle. Every poem is sense-catching. Think of the book as an unfolding life story, brimming with babies and childhood, delight and despair. It’s wit and it’s politics and its pocket narratives, it’s sonic fluency and it’s silence.

“We take lasagna round to John because ‘He’s fallen
through the cracks,’ says my mother. That must be why
it’s bad luck to step on them.'”

James’s metaphors resemble surprise packages the rural courier has just delivered – each is a receptacle of narrative possibilities. Plump with behind-the-scenes anecdotes. I am not sure if this idea works but I was thinking of metaphors as little foundation stones – extraordinary and glorious – upon which I get to build imagine remember things. This is poetry at its interactive best. Reading between and under and above the lines.

“Every high tide, all our little chickens come home / to roost.”

A poetry collection can flourish as a whole, it can offer gold nugget lines sprinkled throughout, and sometimes as in the case of James, it can do both. Every poem, as you see in the pieces I have quoted, has lines that grip you. That fascinate.

The cover of the book has the title and the blurb laid on a musical staff, both bass and treble clef. How perfect when, as James says in his cafe reading, tone matters. It is tone, so exquisitely crafted, that transports us through the treasure shop. Picking up new and old, whether imagined or confessed. Picking up the curious, the ordinary, the satisfying.

Every review I write reconsiders my relationship with poetry, as both reader and writer. What interests me is the poetic effect on mind and heart, maybe skin, think the goosebump effect, or enhanced energy levels. I am gravitating to books that offer tilt and openness – that soothe and challenge and sing, and that is the gift of this new collection: I have experienced tilt, openness, balm, challenge, song. And that is altogether perfect when the weather outside is off-key.

“A woman with a red hat gets on the bus at a stop
nobody gets on at. Aah dee doo, ah dee doo dah day.
A woman and child exit the bus at a bookmark in the
middle of the middle volume of In Search of Lost Time.
Read Proust for soft focus. Aah dee doo, ah de daay dee.
A lamp post on a hillside recedes into gorse and
bedstraw.”

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

James reads from New Days for Old: prose poems

Poetry Shelf celebrates the Ockham NZ Book Awards poetry shortlist: Erik Kennedy picks favourites

Sick Power Trip, Erik Kennedy
Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2025

Erik’s collection has stuck with me for a number of reasons. I have never read a collection quite like it and I love that. It feels like there are two significant settings. Firstly, an extraordinary band of wit and humour, with unexpected scenarios, shifting angles and points of view. Secondly, the necessary and imperative knottiness of humanity, from exposed self to a wider global reach. Not an either or view, but an incredible shifting light on how to live and how to survive. A poetic prism on the contemporary world that might be sharp, jagged, wise, personal.

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. Third up Erik Kennedy.

Erik Kennedy chooses favourites

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

Three sets of three

Three favourite words in your poetry toolkit
But, only, if. Powerhouses of rhetoric.

Three things that matter to you when you read and write poems
I like a first line that’s a poem on its own. I hope that if I’m being lied to in a poem, there’s a good reason for it. And I like to have my priors demolished.

Three poets who have inspired you
Agony to have to do this. Today . . . George Herbert, Norman MacCaig, Natalie Shapero.

One question

Why or how does your poetry book matter to you?
Well, it’s the truest of my books, both personally and artistically. And that feels big. I think readers have sensed that, because the reactions I have got to Sick Power Trip go far beyond anything I heard about the first two. It’s like it took me until my forties to be able to write with the honesty of a teenager. But it takes as long as it takes, I guess. 

One poem

Shop Floor Layout Algorithm

It was with palpable relief that, after a protracted illness, I got back to spending money again.

Economically inactive for October and November, I might as well have been dead instead of just feeling dead.

I got a glimpse of the great beyond, where there are no smart kettles reduced to clearance.

Now I have been in the aisles again, moving slowly and fragilely through the optimised layout of the world.

I have sojourned through an aisle rammed with 900 kilos of chocolate Santas I’m not going to buy because they’ve got dairy in them.

And I thought to myself, in the climate of that aisle, Not everything is about me. 

I thought about the things that are about me.

And I went to look for the aisle where they keep the fully-realised lives, doubtless alongside the wax food wraps and the fancy vinegars.

Erik Kennedy
from Sick Power Trip

Erik Kennedy (he/him) is the author of the poetry collections Another Beautiful Day Indoors (2022) and There’s No Place Like the Internet in Springtime (2018), both with Te Herenga Waka University Press, and he co-edited No Other Place to Stand, a book of climate change poetry from New Zealand and the Pacific (Auckland University Press, 2022). His poems, stories, and criticism have been published in places like berlin lit, FENCE, The Florida Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, Poetry, Poetry Ireland Review, the TLS, and Western Humanities Review. Originally from New Jersey, he lives in Ōtautahi Christchurch.

Full Poetry Shelf review here and reading by Erik here

Erik picks a favourite poem from the book

Te Herenga Waka University Press page