
Ah, after rain the sun.
I begin with a poem by Jenny Bornholdt that lives in the go-to-poetry-room in my head, my storage place for poems that haunt and linger and delight. I follow it with poems by writers whose bodies of work give me continued pleasure.
Gathering poetry with various gleams and sun glints is a perfect tonic at a time when we shudder at a sustained climate of greed and violence and neglect.
The next theme will be up in a few weeks . . . plus on Poetry Day I launched a new series with a feature on Janet Frame. I am spending time with individual poets whose work I have deeply loved over my years of reading, writing and reviewing poetry. One poet at a time. One slow nourishing month at a time.
the poems
Mrs Winter’s jump
We’re coming out
from under
dismal. The sun is up
and so are the children,
mucking about
with skateboards.
He’s out the back
playing ‘Mrs Winter’s
Jump’. And jump
she does. She
gathers up
her rusty skirts
and crosses all the
crooked space
between us.
Jenny Bornholdt
from Mrs Winter’s Jump, Godwit Random House, 2007
The world is an orange and the sun.
Today that’s all there is and all I need.
The baby’s a bohemian,
the world is an orange and the sun’s
a skein from which all life is spun.
The baby’s a banshee.
The world is an orange. And the sun?
Today that’s all there is and all I need.
Janis Freegard
from The Glass Rooster, Auckland University Press, 2015
sunlight
sunlight maps
the shadows of leaves
defined by light
like the shadows
of my heart
Apirana Taylor
from te ata kura: the red-tipped dawn, Canterbury University Press, 2004
Portland Crescent
Waking to the smell of frying bread,
the spiders on the ceiling,
that overhang
of corniced roses.
The sun shines
through baize curtains
past your hips
bowing them in radiance, like a martyr’s.
The whole city’s here for us;
there’s a New World round the corner.
And I am here at last
and lying with you in this room
through the still and perfect morning
of the afternoon.
Anna Smaill
from The violinist in Spring, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2005
A Dream
I dreamed there was a stone wall,
and a sun, shaped like Humpty Dumpty,
round and fat, sitting there;
but no warmth came from the sun.
He smiled, opening a cold yellow mouth.
Ha Ha, he said. I am in the centre of things
but I shall not keep you warm for ever.
Just then a black cat with its face burned
walked slowly and delicately along the wall.
The sun lashed at it
with a stick made of ice and covered with snow.
—Be off, he said sharply.
I woke then, and it was morning,
with a long bird-note falling down and down
like a long long sigh of surprise.
Janet Frame
from The Goose Bath, Vintage, Penguin Random House, 2006
Beside the lake
The dog, as always, was keen to go on
but we could not see a path around
so stopped on the edge
and looked at the water,
the reflection of the trees
symmetrical and neat. Half your face,
the half turned towards me,
was in darkness. The other half,
on the other side of your nose,
was glowing in the lowering rays of the sun.
The dog sat at your feet, perhaps
even on your feet, leaning
into your legs, one fluffy ear cocked,
as if he could hear something
we couldn’t moving between
the trees. You rested your hand
in the deep, soft fur at his neck.
Claire Orchard
from Liveability, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2023
Rondo
and I’m crying
bitter as hell
& the sun streams in
thru the window
over the loud yellow jonquils
catching the scarlet tablecloth
& music pours out of the
window
embroiders the sunshine
& I’m crying I’m
bitter as hell
Joanna Margaret Paul
from like love poems, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2006
Primrose
It is the sun made of flower,
The pale spring sun,
Clean and continent,
Its passion not begun.
Winter sums up the strength
To strike its face.
Life has set a sword
Between a dream and peace.
Its flower disdains to close,
But in its need,
Sealing up its core,
It saves the secret seed.
Outer for inner pays,
Body for heart,
So the song be saved;
That is the rune of art.
Eileen Duggan
from Selected Poems, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 1994
From this hill
Light dapples
tin roofs red and brown
Mitre 10 blazing orange
a klaxon in early pink of day
Sands still hold memory of
dead cattle and imagine in their unbounded
optimism they might somehow
hold back the tide
Beyond, a yawning shimmer
this new day
from this hill
Michelle Elvy
After the sun
After the sun has
set, it seems
impossible that it
could ever rise
again.
Night
sinks into the
bones.
The cliff face
looks weary.
The sand is hard
and cold. The
ocean curls around
its secrets.
Kiri Piahana-Wong
from night swimming, Anahera Press, 2013
the poets
Anna Smaill is the author of Bird Life (2023), The Chimes (2015), which was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize and won best novel in the World Fantasy Awards in 2016, and the poetry collection The Violinist in Spring (2005). Born in Auckland, Anna has spent several years in Japan and the United Kingdom and holds a PhD from the University of London. She lives on Wellington’s south coast with her husband, novelist Carl Shuker, and their two children.
Apirana Taylor from the Ngati Porou, Te Whanau a Apanui, and Ngati Ruanui tribes, and also Pakeha heritage, is a poet, playwright, novelist, short story writer, story teller, actor, painter, and musician. His poems and short stories are frequently studied in schools at NCEA and tertiary level and his poetry and prose has been translated into several languages. He has been Writer in Residence at Massey and Canterbury Universities, and various NZ schools. He has been invited several times to India and Europe and also Colombia to read his poetry and tell his stories, and to National and International festivals. He travels to schools, libraries, tertiary institutions and prisons throughout NZ to read his poetry, tell his stories, and take creative writing workshops.
Claire Orchard studied English and history at Massey University and completed an MA in Creative Writing at the International Institute of Modern Letters. She lives in Te Whanganui-a-Tara and is the author of two poetry collections: Cold Water Cure (2016) and Liveability (2023).
Eileen Duggan (1894–1972), of Irish ancestry, was born in Marlborough and grew up in Tuamarina, near Blenheim. Duggan graduated from Victoria University of Wellington with an MA First Class Honours in History in 1918. She briely taught as a secondary-school teacher, and as an assistant lecturer, before devoting herself to writing full-time. She wrote essays, reviews, articles, a weekly column for the New Zealand Tablet (from 1927) and published five collections of poetry. Three collections were published in the United States and Britain to international acclaim. She left a substantial body of unpublished material, which Peter Whiteford drew upon for Eileen Duggan: Selected Poems (Victoria University Press, 1994). Duggan was awarded an OBE in 1937 and was made an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1943. She lived most of her adult life with her sister, in Wellington.
Janet Frame (1924-2004) is one of New Zealand’s most internationally acclaimed authors. She won numerous prizes and accolades for her poetry, fiction and non-fiction, and was awarded Aotearoa’s highest civil honour the Order of New Zealand. In 1990 her bestselling autobiography An Angel at My Table was adapted for cinema by Jane Campion. Janet Frame bequeathed her ongoing royalties to the Janet Frame Literary Trust and directed that the fund be used to support New Zealand authors.
Janis Freegard is a poet and fiction writer. Her first full-length poetry collection, Kingdom Animalia: The Escapades of Linnaeus, was published by Auckland University Press in 2011. She is also the author of a chapbook, The Continuing Adventures of Alice Spider (Anomalous Press, 2013. Her poetry has appeared in a wide range of journals and anthologies in New Zealand and overseas. In 2014, she held the inaugural Ema Saiko Poetry Fellowship at New Pacific Studio in the Wairarapa. She writes fiction, is a past winner of the BNZ Katherine Mansfield Award and published her first novel with Makaro Press in May 2015.
Jenny Bornholdt has published 12 books of poems including The Rocky Shore (Montana New Zealand Book Award for Poetry, 2009), Selected Poems (2016), and Lost and Somewhere Else (2019). In 2005 she became the fifth Te Mata Estate Poet Laureate, and in 2013 she was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to literature. Her most recent book is A Garden is a Long Time, a collaboration with photographic artist Annemarie Hopecross, published in 2023 by Te Herenga Waka University Press.
Joanna Margaret Paul (1945-2003), poet, painter and experimental filmmaker, was born in Hamilton. She graduated from the University of Auckland with a BA in Philosophy and English, and Elam School of Fine Arts. She was awarded the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship (1983) and the Rita Angus Residency (1993). During her lifetime she published several poetry collections while a range of her poems were showcased in the posthumous like love poems, edited by Bernadette Hall. Her debut collection Imogen was awarded the PEN Best First Book Award for Poetry. (1978). After her death the Wellington City Gallery exhibited her artwork in Beauty, even 1945-2003 with an accompanying book of poems.
Poet and editor Kiri Piahana-Wong is of Maori (Ngāti Ranginui), Chinese, and Pākehā (English) ancestry. She is the author of the poetry collection Night Swimming (2013) and Tidelines (2024), and she is the publisher at Anahera Press. Her work has appeared in over fifty journals and anthologies, and Kiri has performed at numerous literary festivals across the motu. In 2023 Kiri co-edited Te Awa o Kupu alongside Vaughan Rapatahana.
Michelle Elvy is a writer and editor in Ōtepoti Dunedin. Her work examines intersections in our natural world, from the novel the everrumble to the anthology she co-edited last year with Witi Ihimaera, A Kind of Shelter: Whakaruru-taha.


















