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Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Ian Wedde

1

McCahon’s Defile
For John Reynolds

And so Colin I cast off in my frail craft of words
my craft of frail words of crafty words
into the defile of Three Lamps where 
struck by sunshine on the florist’s striped awning
and the autumn leaves outside All Saints  
as you did before fully waking in Waitākere
to look at the elegant pole kauri in dewy light
I defile my sight with closed eyes
and so see better when I open them the Sky Tower
pricking a pale blue heaven like Raphael’s
in Madonna of the Meadows or the scumbled sky of
Buttercup fields forever where there is a constant flow of light 
and we are born into a pure land through Ahipara’s blunt gate 
a swift swipe of pale blue paint
on Shadbolt’s battered booze bar where bards 
bullshitted among the kauri.

Gaunt cranes along the city skyline
avert their gazes towards the Gulf 
away from babblers at Bambina
breakfast baskers outside Dizengoff 
some pretty shaky dudes outside White Cross 
beautiful blooms in buckets at Bhana Brothers
(open for eighty years) Karen Walker’s window
looking fresh and skitey across Ponsonby Road
my charming deft dentist at Luminos 
most of South Asia jammed into one floor at the Foodcourt
Western Park where wee Bella bashed her head 
on some half-buried neoclassical nonsense
the great viewshaft to not-faux Maungawhau
and then turn left into the dandy defile of K Road
where you make your presence felt yet again
Colin through the window of Starkwhite
in building 19-G_W-13 where dear John Reynolds
has mapped your sad Sydney derives and defiles 
across the road from Herabridal’s windows all dressed up
in white broderie Anglaise like lovely frothy brushstrokes
or the curdled clouds and words you dragged into the light
fantastic along beaches and the blackness that was all
you saw when you opened your eyes sometimes
like the bleary early morning Thirsty Dogs 
and weary hookers a bit further along my walk.

I love the pink pathway below the K Road overbridge
a liquid dawn rivulet running down towards Waitemata’s riprap
but also the looking a bit smashed washing hung out
on the balcony above Carmen Jones
and over the road from Artspace and Michael Lett etc
there’s El Sizzling Lomito, Moustache, Popped, and Love Bucket
the Little Turkish Café has $5 beers
it’s like a multiverse botanical garden round here
you could lose yourself in the mad babble of it
like the Botanical Gardens at Woolloomooloo
with the clusterfucking rut-season fruit-bats 
screaming blue murder.

But it’s peaceful again down Myers Park
the mind empties and fills like a lung breathing
the happy chatter of kids swinging 
and my memory of you Colin 
sitting alone and forlorn on a bench
must have been about 1966
contemplating the twitchy cigarette between your fingers
as if it divined the buried waters of Waihorotiu
or the thoughts that flow beneath thought
in the mind’s defile at dawn when you open your eyes
and see that constant flow of light among the trees.

Ian Wedde

Note on

Ode to Auckland 1. McCahon’s Defile (For John Reynolds)

This is the first of five ‘Ode to Auckland’ sections/poems, themselves the first twenty-one-page section of a sixty-one-page book BEING HERE: SELECTED POEMS 2020 – 2025 looking to publish in 2026. The poems address a city I’ve loved for the many years I’ve lived in it at various times, including early on when I was a student at Auckland University in the 1960s when I lived in Wood Street, Ponsonby. It was a pretty rough neighbourhood then compared to the Ponsonby of today which is mostly upmarket and chic. Our part of it in Three Lamps is not in the wealthy space, a functionally convenient four-floor unit in a multi-unit apartment complex with office space on the top floor for my wife Donna and myself.  What this elevated space provides is the view out west from my panoramic fourth-floor windows to the Waitākare hills across the luxuriantly tree’d suburbs that stretch across that view. What’s just across the road from our inner-city place is one of my favourite dog-walks, it takes Maxi and me into the steep, sensational viewshaft down to the north-east harbour where we often walk in the morning via one of the little old-tree-planted parks that have survived from the 1960s Ponsonby I remember.  

Living here now in this folding-together of memory and present, I celebrate the huge old Chinaberry tree that stretches up past our office window on Donna’s northern side and is typical of the old plantings I can see stretching out west to the Waitākeres on my side, and I’m glad to have most of what I need within walking distance, but I’m annoyed by the homogenizing impacts of the suburb’s wealth and even find myself grumbling in an old-fuck way about why all the classic villas are getting painted the same white. But the frustration is really with myself. Back in the day when I was flatting in Wood Steet the scungy villas hardly mattered and Ponsonby was just a great place to live. It still is. The title of my prospective book, Being Here, should be where I stop whingeing.

The poems in the ‘Ode to Auckland’ section are mostly written to-and-fro across something like a give-or-take twelve-syllable line which I like because it gets the measuring mind in a focused but not stalled state – like walking with wide-open eyes and a sense of your foot-falls having an organic not regimented pace, mind and breath in synch, the lines reaching ahead but anticipating a transition that keeps the thing moving.

Ian Wedde, 21 October 2025

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Lynley Edmeades in conversation with Kiran Dass

Kia ora koutou, booklovers!

Scorpio Books and Otago University Press warmly welcome you to an author talk featuring Lynley Edmeades in conversation with Kiran Dass.

Lynley Edmeades is the author of Hiding Places, a compelling and beautifully written meditation on early motherhood and creativity published in September 2025. Told through a series of fragments that range from raw and troubled to delightful and hilarious, this remarkable book responds to the unexpected shocks and discoveries of becoming a mother, drawing on excerpts from family letters and secretive medical records, and advice contained in Truby King’s 1913 tract, Feeding and Care of Baby. This author talk will include discussion on this wonderful and strange book, already a favourite with the Scorpio Books staff.

All welcome, this is a free event. Refreshments provided. Please send in your RSVP.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Mining is the Pits Poetry Reading

Mining is the Pits Poetry Reading

Central Stories Museum, Alexandra
6:30 pm–8:30 pm, Saturday 22 November 2025

Six Aotearoa New Zealand poets – Michael Harlow, Bridget Auchmuty, Jillian Sullivan, David Eggleton, Richard Reeve and Robert Sullivan – read poems to emphasise our cultural and spiritual connection with the land as a people, and protest the ecological and aesthetic violence being proposed in the form of open-cast gold mining.

Poetry reading to protest industrial gold-mining

A mining-protest reading by six Aotearoa New Zealand poets – Mining is the Pits – is scheduled for the Central Stories Museum in Alexandra on 22 November 2025.

The reading – which features both the present New Zealand Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan and 2019-2022 New Zealand Poet Laureate David Eggleton – is planned as a continuation of the cultural protest No Go Bendigo, an art auction curated by acclaimed Wellington-based writer Gregory O’Brien featuring leading New Zealand artists including Sir Grahame Sydney, Dick Frizzell and Nigel Brown.

Poets and artists across the motu emphatically reject the plans of Australian company Santana Minerals and other multinationals to establish open-cast gold mines in the Central Otago backcountry, not only at Bendigo in the foothills of the Dunstan Mountains but also in the Rock and Pillar and Lammerlaw Ranges near Middlemarch, the Ida Valley near Alexandra and the Silver Peaks near Dunedin.

In Auckland, Paula Green, recipient of the 2017 Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in Poetry, has hosted on her widely-read Poetry Shelf website, ‘Reading Poetry to Rare Lizards’ – Poetry in Defence of the Environment, a diverse and powerful collection of protest poems in response to the Bendigo proposal.

The scale of the proposed onslaught on Otago’s natural heritage, brought on in no small part by Minister of Resources Shane Jones’ aggressively pro-mining stance and Fast-Track legislative reforms, is unprecedented.

Poet Michael Harlow of Alexandra, recipient of the 2018 Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in Poetry and a poet performing as part of Mining is the Pits, has described the widespread proposals as a ‘plague’.

Celebrated Oturehua author Jillian Sullivan, surviving partner of the renowned late poet and environmentalist Brian Turner,  believes ‘Brian would be into this fight for land boots and all.’

While the protest reading has been brought into existence by Santana’s proposal and its implications for Central Otago, the poets in their work will be emphasising our cultural and spiritual connection with the land as a people, with the environmental destruction arising from open-cast mining being wholly contrary to those values.

For more information on the reading or to arrange for poet interviews, please contact:

Richard Reeve (Coordinator)

THE POETS

Michael Harlow of Alexandra is the author of thirteen books of poetry and a recipient of the Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in 2018.

Bridget Auchmuty lives in the Ida Valley. Her collection of poetry, Unmooring, was released by Quentin Wilson Publishing in 2020.

Jillian Sullivan lives and writes in Oturehua in the Ida Valley.  Recent publications include Map for the Heart: Ida Valley Essays (Otago University Press, 2020), A Way Home  (Potton and Burton, 2016) and Parallel (Steel Roberts, 2014)

David Eggleton was New Zealand Poet Laureate from 2019-2022. His most recent book is Lifting the Island: Poems (Red Hen Press, 2025). Eggleton lives in Ōtepoti Dunedin.

Richard Reeve lives in Warrington / Ōkāhau, to the north of Ōtepoti Dunedin. A barrister sole, he is also the author of seven collections of poetry including About Now (Maungatua Press, 2024).

Robert Sullivan (Ngā Puhi (Ngāti Manu / Ngāti Hau), Kāi Tahu, Irish) lives in Oamaru. He is the current New Zealand Poet Laureate. His most recent book, Hopurangi – Songcatcher: Poems from the Maramataka (Auckland University Press, 2024), was a finalist for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry at the 2025 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Compound Press launch Minarets 15

Readings & installations to celebrate the launch of our special issue connecting the poetics of Aotearoa with South Asia and its diaspora, edited by Nirvana Haldar.

Readings by Arielle Walker, Jasmin Singh, Liam Jacobson (more TBC).

Installations and screenings of works by international contributors Imaad Majeed, Priyanka Chhabra (more TBC).

Join us at @samoahouselibrary for some snacks and beverages in the company of good words.

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem – SIDE A: MANIFESTO and SIDE B: MANIFESTEAUX by Tate Fountain

SIDE A: MANIFESTO

  1.  I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH.

  2.  I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH AND CALL THEM DREAMS.

  3. WE WILL CELEBRATE THE PETALS OF THE SPIDER CHRYSANTHEMUM, EMBRACING IN THREE DIMENSIONS, EACH AS A THICK IMPASTO STROKE REACHING FURTHER INTO THE WORLD THAN ANY MORTAL PAINTER COULD MANIFEST, DUSTED WITH TRACKS OF PIGMENT ALMOST-MIXED AND OF GREATER DIVINITY FOR IT—THE VIEW STILL AND EXPLODED.

  4. EVERYTHING WILL BE ALRIGHT, ACTUALLY—IF YOU HOLD TO THIS KNOWLEDGE AND ARE TENACIOUS ABOUT YOUR LIFE.

  5. I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH.

  6. I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH AND CALL THEM GOD-GIVEN.

  7. YOU MUST FIND THE THING THAT SINGS TO YOU AND LET YOURSELF REJOICE IN THE MELODY.

  8. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED. A YOUNG WOMAN WALKING DOWN KARANGAHAPE ROAD IN THE RAIN, BUNCHES OF FLOWERS FROM A PONSONBY GROCER CRADLED IN HER ARMS, IS JUST AS BEAUTIFUL WITHOUT BEING FLATTENED, FRAMED, AND HELD AT A REMOVE. SHE LIVES WITHOUT US HAVING SEEN HER.

  9. DIVE INTO THE HAVING. SEE HOW IT IMPACTS YOUR COMPULSION TO SPEAK.

  1. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED. LET SOMEBODY BREATHE WORDS OF LOVE BEHIND A CLOSED DOOR AND RESIST THE URGE TO HAVE A LENS PHASE INTANGIBLY THROUGH THE WOOD. SET DOWN THE SCREENPLAY.

  2. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED. ARE YOU IN LOVE OR DO YOU JUST WANT SOMEONE TO TEND TO IN THE SOFT BLUR OF A CROWD SHOT?

  3. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED.

  4. MY LIFE IS REAL—THIS—NOW—AND IT IS HAPPENING.

  5. KEEP SOMETHING FOR YOURSELF—THE TROUBLE WITH SO EASILY DISGUISING THE EXERTION IS THAT THOSE YOU’RE SOOTHING DON’T GAUGE THE DEGREE OF YOUR EFFORTS.

  6. YOU DON’T HAVE TO LIVE WITH THIS CAVERNOUS THING INSIDE THAT YOU FEEL COMPELLED, FOR OTHERS’ SAKE, TO CRACK OPEN.

  7. WE WILL CELEBRATE THE HURTLING BEAT—THE SOARING CHORUS—THE WAILING SINGER—THE ALTO AT DUSK.

  8. YOU’RE NOT TRAPPED IN THIS. YOU’RE NOT TRAPPED AND ANYTHING CAN CHANGE AND NOTHING IS EVER WITHOUT HOPE.

  9. I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH.

  10. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED: SURGING ADRENALINE, A POP BEAT AND A THICK ANCHOR—THE THRUM, THE THRUM, THE THRUM, THE THRUM, THE THRUM. THE TURN AWAY. THE I’M BACK. THE HEY, BABY. THE—THE—THE—

  1. I WILL NOT DWELL ON EVERYTHING THAT COMES AFTER. I WILL FRONTLOAD THE GIFT AND THE DOING.

  2. WE WILL CELEBRATE CORIANDER AND MINT AND BASIL—CELEBRATE THE PARSLEY THAT USED TO GROW IN CLAY POTS AT THE VERGE WHERE YOUR GREAT-GRANDFATHER’S GARDEN MET THE STEPS OF THE HOUSE. YOU HAVE THE SAME HANDS NOW AS THOSE HE HELD. THE SAME IDIOSYNCRACIES AS ONCE KNOWN BY THOSE WHO HAVE CLOSEST LOVED YOU.

  3. WE WILL CELEBRATE THE REFRACTED LIGHT AS IT CASTS ITS SLANTING GLANCES.

  4. WE WILL BANISH SELF-DENIAL.

  5. I WILL DEFAULT TO COURAGE AND FAITH.

  6. I WILL EMBRACE FUN!!!!!!!!!!

  7. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED.

  8. MY LIFE CAN BE REAL WITHOUT IT BEING CAPTURED. THE TENDER SLICING OF ANGEL TOMATOES ON THE SUMMER MORNING—THE GENTLE POOL OF OLIVE OIL—THE UNENCUMBERED ENOUGHNESS IN THE MEASURE OF MILK TO BE STEAMED.

  9. I WILL BE ACTIVE IN MY DEVOTION.

  1. WE WILL CELEBRATE THE FACT IT’S ALL AN ADVENTURE, EVERY SINGLE THING, AND ONE DAY IT WILL BE GONE.

  2. I WILL LET GO OF THE COMPULSION TO CARVE IMMEASURABLY DEEP GULFS BETWEEN MY PRESENT SITUATION AND A FORMLESS, IMAGINED SCENARIO WHEREIN MY LIFE IS SOMEHOW BETTER. I WILL LET GO OF ABANDONING MYSELF AND MY DEAREST ONES AND ALL THOSE I AM YET TO MEET. I WILL COME HOME TO MYSELF AND LOVE HER.

  3. I WILL BE GRATEFUL FOR EVERY HAND-UP AND KINDNESS.

  4. ALL OF US IN SUCH CIRCUMSTANCES WILL CELEBRATE OUR DAY-TO-DAY STABILITY AND THE SAFETY IT CAN BE SO EASY TO TAKE FOR GRANTED. WHEN WE FIND OURSELVES IN POSSESSION OF THIS INALIENABLE HUMAN RIGHT, NEEDLED PERHAPS BY DISSATISFACTION BUT NOT RAVAGED BY STATE-SANCTIONED EVIL, IT IS OUR DUTY TO STAND AS MEANINGFULLY AS WE CAN WITH THOSE WHOSE HUMANITY, HISTORY, AND FUTURE IS BEING TARGETED AND ERASED. WE MUST. HEAR ME: WE MUST.

  5. I WILL BE ACTIVE IN MY DEVOTION.

  6. I WILL RETIRE THE METHODS I TOOK UP TO SURVIVE MY ADOLESCENCE—I NEVER HAVE TO BE THAT GIRL AGAIN. INSTEAD—

  7. I WILL BE EXACTLY THE PERSON I’VE WAITED FOR, EVERY WOMAN I’VE LOOKED AT WITH ADMIRATION AND DELIGHT, WITH DEEP, DELICIOUS ASPIRATION. I HAVE THE MEANS NOW. I JUST HAVE TO RESPECT MYSELF ENOUGH TO BECOME HER.

  8. I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH AND CALL IT BEING PREPARED.

  1. WE WILL CARVE OUR MOST FUNDAMENTAL TRUTHS INTO THE MATTER OF THIS AND ALL WORLDS, AND WE WILL NEVER LET IMPOSED DESPAIR WIN OUT.

  2. WE WILL MAKE MISTAKES AND GROW AND ALLOW THE SAME FOR OTHERS.

  3. WE WILL CELEBRATE PASSION AND RELIEF.

  4. I WILL COME HOME TO MYSELF AND LOVE HER.

  5. I WILL NOT DWELL IN THE CAUSEWAYS OF ANGUISH.

  6. I WILL COME HOME TO MYSELF AND LOVE HER.

 

 

SIDE B: MANIFESTEAUX

  1. The thing about the other side is that it fuckin’ rocks

  2. —once you take the reins of your life and throw all that other shit out.

  3. It’s a wonder what the right pair of boots will do, even if they immediately crack a sole on the edge of the footpath. Even at the end of a month that has felt cursed to you. Even as everything in your body is screaming at you that it’s time.

  4. Throw it away! Throw it away! Let it mean more by letting it go! Throw it away!

  5. Don’t luxuriate! Let the tides lap at it! It’ll stay if it’s meant to! Here’s your real life, baby!

  6. BRIGHT BLEEDING TULIPS SPRAY CHRYSANTHEMUMS THE LONG LINE FOR THE MADELEINES THE CITRUS ZEST AND THE ELDERFLOWER THE OIL CLINGING TO THE ICING SUGAR THE BUFFETTING LATE SPRING WIND

  7. THE DIP OF YOUR COLLARBONE SMOKED LAVENDER ELECTRIC BLUE

  8. Loosen your grip! Open your hand!

  9. It’s all got a bit serious, hasn’t it!

  10. THE DIP OF YOUR COLLARBONE SMOKED LAVENDER ELECTRIC BLUE THE MONT BLANC DOWN THE ALLEYWAY ON A SUNNY DAY THE SQUARE LINES THE GEOMETRIC JAVA TILING THE SWEET DEEP EUCALYPTUS THE

  11. DEEP EU— ORANGE TU— ENOUGH LOVE HERE THAT THERE’S SOMETHING TO LOSE

  12. You owe it to yourself not to hesitate. Or else you owe it to yourself to power through. You owe it to yourself to be the version of yourself you wish you could be, the one you know you are at your best. Tip your head back and meet the rain. And meet it. And meet it. And—

  13. Most of the time what you’re scared of losing isn’t the thing itself anyway, just evidence that, for a time, you had it—and you did; and you do; but the past doesn’t exist anymore, just as the future doesn’t, hasn’t reached us yet; what can you put down on the way there? What preemptive punishment are you assigning to yourself in order to beat some hypothetical judge to the punch down the line? Let it go! And—

  14. I love you in words I love you aloud I love you waiting for the bus I love you incomprehensible I love you at the perfect time I love you with jitters I love you with your hair in a bun giving notes I love you and your dog who is in many ways a lot like me and vice versa I love you through all events I love you with shared pocket tissues I love you for the others you love I love you from 1.5m away to ensure we’re in focus I love your attentive baby I love your braids I love you at the football I love you unproofread I love you undone I love you I love

  15. THE UNEXPECTED GENEROUS GIFT NEVER ASKED FOR AND YET RECEIVED NEVER ASKED FOR OUT OF THE ASSUMPTION IT WOULD NOT BE GRANTED AND YET RECEIVED AND YET GIVEN WITH THE FULLNESS OF ANOTHER’S HEART

  16. AND NOTICE THE EXCITEMENT SPILLING OVER ACROSS THE TABLETOP FLOODING THE PICKLED FENNEL AND THE STRACCIATELLA THE CRUMBLED PISTACHIO AND THE SICILIAN OLIVES THE FOCACCIA AND THE ROSEMARY ALREADY OILED AND FLAKED WITH SALT AND THE UNREMARKED-UPON SHARED DESSERT

  17. WHAT MIGHT OTHERS TAKE AS SIGNS WHEN REALLY THE LOVE IS AT THE SURFACE WHEN REALLY THE LOVE IS THERE WHEN REALLY ALL I MEAN IS EXACTLY WHAT I AM SAYING TO YOU WHEN WE CAN SINK TWO SPOONS INTO THE CUT OF A CHEESECAKE TO TASTE OUR EQUAL SHARE OF BLISS AND I’M NOT TRYING TO TELEGRAPH ANYTHING ELSE AND WHAT IT MEANS IS THAT WE’RE HERE TOGETHER WHAT IT MEANS IS THAT WE’RE HERE TOGETHER WHAT IT MEANS IS THAT WE’RE HERE TOGETHER HERE RIGHT HERE FOR NOW THANK GOD

  18. One day, sickeningly soon, it’ll all change. You’ll have to find someone new to call on the way home from work, some new supermarket corner to be disappointed by, yet another new site to which hopes can be pinned. All those things you once wrote about with such matter-of-fact self-derision—well, in many ways you were right, trying to haul yourself up as you always have, closer to that great wish, that gnawing right place, that fantasy. But that other world will be one you build, which requires grace. A different flower market. A different, likely more demanding, commute.

  19. Another gentle gaze to fall into.

  20. For the better. For the better.

  21. LET THE IMAGES CASCADE

  22. If you tallied it up—took time and took stock—it’s likely that the list of material objects you’d deem essential to the base comforts of your life and your sense of self would be vanishingly small. To be told this makes you defensive, as though you’re being reprimanded, as though they’re being taken from you by another person’s thought experiment, as though you are without agency again. Unless you’re being actively threatened, resist this urge. The odds of the ‘you’ actually being you are rare. Act in good faith. Let the rest fall through your fingers, unclaimed, to find a better home.

  23. All those months. Years. Whispered, as in prayer: Give me something to run to. Give me something that makes it hard to leave. Better yet—baby, just go. You’re ready! You’ve done all the learning you need to! All the rest will roll on from here, underfoot and overhead and in your hands. So much unknown—and how electric is that!

  24. LET THE IMAGES CASCADE AS A BROOK AS A PERFUME AS A WATERFALL YOUR BEAUTIFUL FACE YOUR BREATHLESS LAUGH YOUR SINCERITY CAUGHT OFF GUARD YOUR HAIR UNKEMPT YOUR SOFT SHIRT CORNFLOWER BLUE MY BOOTS REPLACED THE CRYSTAL DESCANT THE FINAL RASPING JAGGED STONE AGAINST THE SMOOTHNESS OF YOUR VOICE THE PAPERED FRONDS

  25. THE IRIS BOLTING—

  26. ALL THOSE YEARS AS CONCERTINA. LET YOUR HEART REACH RIGHT THROUGH.

  27. You’ve got here and you love her: you love her; you love her; you love her.

  28. Here’s your real life, baby. Here’s your real life and your leitmotif and the themes you’ll never be cured of.

  29. STAND YOUR GROUND / EXHIBIT GRACE / REARRANGE YOUR PRIORITIES FOR THE WORLD YOU LIVE IN AND THE WORLD YOU HOPE, THROUGH ACTIVE COURSE, YOU’RE HEADED TO

  30. Enjoy it, this, everything—everyone through a warm lens, half-grained and smiling.

  31. BELIEVE IN SOMETHING BETTER, FULLER-HEARTED / REFRAME ABUNDANCE / ESCHEW DEPLETION / BE STEADFAST, CLEVER, FIERCELY KIND

  32. And you love her. Keep on proving it.

  33. AND THE IMAGES CASCADE

  34. And you’re here now.

  35. AND YOU HOLD THEM

  36. And you’re gonna love it here.

  37. AND YOU’RE HERE NOW

  38. And you love her.

  39. AND I’M GONNA LOVE IT HERE.

  40. And I’m here now.

  41. AND I LOVE HER / AND

  42. I’m gonna love it here.

Tate Fountain

Tate Fountain is a writer, editor, and creative producer. She has held programming, digital marketing, and strategy roles with Te Ahurei Toi o Tāmaki Auckland Arts Festival, Whānau Mārama New Zealand International Film Festival, and theatre and film company, extracurricular. She is the author of SHORT FILMS (Tender Press, 2022) and, as of September 2025, the editor of Starling, alongside Maddie Ballard. 

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Poetry at Piha with Anne Kennedy

Event by Going West Books and Writers Festival

Poetry at Piha returns! The Listening Sand with Anne Kennedy
Bring a picnic and gather at North Piha and join award winning poet Anne Kennedy for a gentle, exploratory poetical workshop under the pohutukawa. Then carve your words into the vast sand-art mural of David “Beach Tagger” Hilliam.

Please register interest to diane@goingwestfest.co.nz

RAIN DATE: 16th November

We’re thrilled to host the fourth edition of our now-famous Poetry at Piha event. This free, public workshop is – in essence – a trip to the beach with one of our finest writers and literary mentors, Anne Kennedy. What could be nicer than that? The inspiration of nature, the power of literature, and the sweeping beauty of large-scale sand art to wrap it all up: it’s a lot!

Anne will take us through a gentle but thought-provoking workshop under the pohutukawa at North Piha. Then we’ll all take our work to the beach to meet with David “Beach Tagger” Hilliam to entwine our words, our kupu and our visions with his own beach mural.

Anne’s poetry workshop is easy, exploratory and fun. She’ll help you find your tone, select words, and work poetical wizardry like crystalising time, resolving insurmountable challenges and telling secrets, memories and hopes to the sand, the sea and the seagulls
In the words of a former participant; “That was a special day for me – the sharing of our deeper feelings with complete strangers, subtle but powerful. The grounding of the ocean, the senses, the truth.”

Special thanks to the Waitākere Ranges Local Board for their ongoing support to Going West Trust and for making this unique connection with nature a reality.

You can see samples of previous editions of this event here and here.

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: NZ National Poetry Slam 2025

tickets here

The New Zealand National Poetry Slam returns to Wellington for the first time in 10 years.

Poets from around the country will battle it out for the title of 2024 National Champion!

This year, poets 12 poets representing 8 regions from across the country will take the stage. Who will be crowned the 2024 Champion? Judges chosen from the audience will decide!

This event has been known to sell fast so grab your tickets in advance.

Established in 2011, NZ Poetry Slam is an independent community run by a committee of poets from across Aotearoa.

All Ages.

Uncensored but hate speech free.

Poetry Shelf Protest series: ‘Reading Poetry to Rare Lizards’ – Poetry in Defence of the Environment

Summit, Thomson Gorge Road (looking towards Mount Aspiring).
Photo: Gregory O’Brien, October 2025

Backcountry

Now and ever
the mountain river.

A fantail flits.
Moss over branch,
the trees hurry.

Undying stone
continues the rhyme:
there is no time.


Richard Reeve
from Generation Kitchen (Otago University Press, 2015)

At the end of September, Gregory O’Brien sent me the media release for an online fundraising art show he was curating.

Nine well-established New Zealand artists have gifted works to raise funds in opposition to the proposed Bendigo-Ophir gold mine in Central Otago. The artists – all strongly opposed to the open pit mine – have come together under the banner “No-Go-Bendigo”, and are offering 100% of the funds raised towards fighting the fast tracked mine. All have been deeply affected by the majesty and singular character of the region—as the statements on the exhibition website underline. They all wanted to make a strong stand.

Dick Frizzell, Enough Gold Already, 2025,
limited edition of 12 screenprints, 610 x 860mm,

The artists who have contributed are Bruce Foster, Dick Frizzell, Elizabeth Thomson, Eric Schusser, Euan Macleod, Grahame Sydney, Gregory O’Brien, Jenna Packer and Nigel Brown. The works they have gifted for sale can be seen here

Exhibition organiser Gregory O’Brien, said that the group of artists from all over the country was highly motivated to help. “The proposed desecration of a heritage area for purely monetary gain is an outrage to all of us, as it is to the citizens of Central Otago and to all New Zealanders.” He said that the initial group of nine artists have already heard from other artists enthusiastic to help “during the next round”. “Painters, photographers, writers, film-makers, choreographers and other arts practitioners from within Central Otago and further afield are incensed at the churlishness of both the mining consortium and the Government’s ruinous ‘Fast Track’ (aka ‘Highway to Hell’) legislation. The environmental cost of such a cold-blooded, extractive exercise is simply too high, as is the social impact and down-stream legacy.”

When Gregory said that this was just the beginning, at the end of the exhibition media release, I knew Poetry Shelf had to become involved. My new Poetry Protest series was the perfect opportunity – knowing that poetry speaks out and for and because of issues in myriad ways. Gregory, Richard Reeve and I invited a number of poets based in the area (and beyond) to contribute a poem. Jenny Powell’s poem catches sight of the Dunstan Range, David Kārena-Holmes has penned an aching lament, Emma Neale writes of her local blue swallows that can also be found near Benigo. And then there are poets with miners in the family history such as Jeffrey Paparoa Holman and Diane Brown. Twenty three poets have gathered on this occasion but there are so many poets in Aotearoa singing out in defence of the land. Some poets chose poems from collections, while others wrote poems on the spot, often out of anger and frustration.

Richard Reeve, who is organising an anti-mining poetry reading in Alexandra in November (see poster), has written an introduction for the post. He sent me a suite of poems, both new and old, that touch multiple cords of beauty and outrage. I have included an older poem to head the post, and a longer new poem after his introduction. I have also included an extract from a recent media release by Sam Neill.

An enormous thank you to Gregory and Richard for co-curating this post, to all the poets who contributed, and to everyone who continues to read and write poetry. Today is a day of significant strikes by nurses, doctors and teachers in Aotearoa, a day with a major weather event still unfolding and widespread power outages, and the continuing heartslamming news from overseas.

To be able to connect with readers and writers who care, matters so very much, as I sit here weeping with a strange mix of sadness and gladness, beauty and outrage.

Thank you.

Thomson Gorge Road
Photo: Richard Harvey, October 2025

For Freddy – Ora pro nobis

A little while ago now, Lord Byron in his book-length poem The Prophecy of Dante mused, “Many are poets who have never penned / Their inspiration, and perchance the best”. By this he meant that even non-literary types can have poetic experiences. That of course begs the question, What do we mean when we talk about poetry? Is poetry, as some sceptics would suggest, purely prose with line-breaks, or does the concept embrace something more than words on a page to encompass the wider spectrum of lived experience?

Thomson Gorge Road in Central Otago is a place many would say has its own poetry, whether the subject of poems or not. A backcountry dirt road stretching from Matakanui near Omakau in the east to Bendigo near Tarras in the west, it cuts through a pass in the Dunstan Mountains that divides the Manuherikia Valley from the Upper Clutha Basin. Thomson Gorge Road is hawk country. Tussock country. The road is notorious for the sheer number of gates one has to open when using it as an alternative to the highway that skirts the base of the mountain range south to Alexandra and the Cromwell Gorge. The gates, livestock, steep winding track, stream crossings and mud mean Thomson Gorge Road is certainly not the fastest route from Omakau to Wanaka, even though more direct than the highway. Nevertheless, people travel it regularly enough.

Indeed, those who travel the road are off on an adventure. Punctuated with heritage sites associated with the colonial period (mine-shafts, abandoned huts, battery sites and so on), and before that significant to Southern Māori travelling the pounamu routes west to east, the passage exemplifies the interconnected complex of geophysical frontiers, native-vegetation-clad landforms and cultural touchstones that makes Central Otago uniquely important in our national psyche. The scenery is magnificent, encompassing in the course of the journey expansive views of two of the three great basins of Central Otago. Just as with the Hawkdun Mountains to the north or the Clutha-Mata-au River and Old Man Range to the south, Thomson Gorge Road is an essential component of wild Central Otago’s fabric, part of our collective heritage as a nation.

Despite this, flagged on by Minister of Resources Shane Jones and his “fast-track” legislative reforms, an Australian gold mining company – Santana Minerals – is now seeking permission to establish a giant open-cast gold mine not far from the crest of Thomsons Saddle, in an area situated within an officially designated Outstanding Natural Landscape and already subject to a conservation covenant. If consented, the base of the mine where huge volumes of tailings and toxic waste are to be stored will be only 6-7 kilometres from the Clutha-Mata-au River. In light of Minister Jones’ fast-track legislation, the general public have no right of input on the outcome of the proposal even though the open-cast mine is widely regarded as offensive, a public health risk and indeed a brutal and crass affront to the values of the region.

Those protesting the mine include not only poets and artists but also people who have no great interest per se in the literary arts or perhaps even the fine arts. Some have limited exposure to literature. Others likely know very little at all about Byron or indeed Cilla McQueen, Jillian Sullivan, Liz Breslin, Michael Harlow and others who have contributed poems to this edition of Poetry Shelf. Like the poets, they nevertheless understand intuitively and deeply that no amount of trumpeting by Santana or Minister Jones of the alleged financial value of the gold deposit will annul the violence being proposed to the fine poem – or fine wine, or fine painting, or good day on a bike – that is wild Central.

In this issue, Gregory O’Brien uses as an epigraph to his contribution, ‘Thomson Gorge Road Song’, Minister Jones’ now infamous comments to the effect that the days of deifying New Zealand wilderness are over:

We are not going to sit around and read poetry to rare lizards, whilst our current account deficit goes down the gurgler … If there is a mining opportunity and it’s impeded by a blind frog, goodbye Freddy.

Au contraire, Minister. In this issue we proudly dedicate poems to skinks, hawks, backcountry streams, tussocks, snow melt. We wilfully and without reservation pledge our heart and soul to Freddy. For, as Annabel Wilson asks in her poem ‘Gorge’, What would the real Santana – St Anna, mother of Mary – say? “Sancta Ana, ora pro nobis.” Pray for us, St Anna. God help us if we cannot as a people do better than this.

Richard Reeve – 20.10.25

Clutha Gold

People! Keep an eye on the prize before you. Emerging nugget,
the stuff “Black Peter” knew about, Bombay gentleman

who struck gold in 1857 at Tuapeka, scooping glinting gravel
from the riverbed with his cup years before Gabriel Read

saw flecks “shining like the stars in Orion on a frosty night”,
gold confirmed in Otago, a decade after New South Wales,

the glory – not to say reward – bestowed on the well-dressed candidate
(not the half-caste from Bombay whose honesty gave rise to no reward).

People! Keep an eye on the prize. Yes. The cycle trail we journey
in a meditative state, pausing to assess, for instance,

the scarification of the land above Beaumont Gorge,
native scrub scraped off just wherever possible given the steepness,

elsewhere, feral trees spilling out of the radiata along the tops,
sprouting under cliffs that once were waymarks to Māori

travelling up river from the coast along mahika kai routes.
If we are honest with ourselves, it is carnage. Chaos, plunder:

we ogle the fate of our kind who would move mountains
not far from here, nevermind scrub, in pursuit of the shiny stuff,

at so-called “Bendigo” in the Dunstan Mountains, Kura-matakitaki,
where men and women with geology degrees feverishly

calculate potential returns from the sparkling core samples
extracted under permit from the mountainback,

their CEO crowing future profits in the billions, regional growth,
speculation to accelerate the pulse of offshore investors.

Without cash, their fabled open-cast mine may not proceed.
Or it may. Certainly, the carnage we see from the riverbank

tells a story the trail people wouldn’t want us to focus on,
namely, the irrepressibility of our activity, humans in time

destined to be extracted from the view just like the mountains,
the land sliced up by farming, forestry, mining, infrastructure,

enterprise that in the end failed to save us from ourselves.
Those, at least, are the signs. What happens remains to be seen,

and we are getting ahead of ourselves. The end isn’t quite yet.
There is still sunlight and shadow, glitter of today’s fine day.

The prize is this deep blue vein of the motu, Clutha, Mata-au,
river that gave a pseudonym to Janet, a colour to Marilynn,

incrementally digging out its passage through culture,
resolving its way to the sea. We cycle from name to name,

past livestock, old gardens unravelling with age like memories,
derelict barns at the edge of paddocks, willow clusters;

the prize presumably is us, steering our contraptions
along the edge of a signature, at Beaumont saying goodbye

to the river, the trail now mostly following the highway,
gold country but no longer river country, dead Black Peter

ghosting the great disenfranchisements evident from the trail
as we ride through a converted landscape, sheep country

at Bowler’s Creek, pine plantations on the hills above Lawrence,
wholly transformed land, just riparian planting in the valleys

to give any indication of a time before now. The age of birds,
rivers, podocarps, sunlight, snow-melt, flax. Winking boulders

in which the ore retained its secret, faithful to the long moment
before our century of hard-hatted Ministers of Resources

tapping rocks and denouncing the catastrophe of the economy
(no mention of the slow-motion catastrophe of the land,

what is obvious all around us yet routinely overlooked
by those in rapid transit from name to name, place to place).

People! Anyway. Yes. Keep an eye on the prize before you,
we get that. And riding into Lawrence is certainly gold,

the sun setting on our handlebars, sheep laughing as we pass,
the fields outside town home to sun-drunk ducks, goats, horses,

good sorts in the only environment they have ever known,
lifestyle blocks, drained, fenced paddocks, previously bog

that before the man-driven fire was once primaeval forest.
Hard to believe, the gaudy general store on the main drag

now also extinct; also extinct the ironmongers, breweries, lions
that roamed the township, in its origins displaced by mining creep

to the present location. Not yet extinct the beauty of the town.
Rusted colonial rooftops pepper the view, seasoned by exotic trees.

Truth is, nature was always ahead of us. To the bitter end.
Whatever control any of us dreamed we had was an illusion.

Night colonises the shadows. Worn out, we pull up at the car.
We are the gift that keeps on giving, despite the prognosis.

Clutha Gold was awesome, we say. At the Night ‘n Day, we gorge.
And it is a fact, we are happy. Good work people! Keep it up!

Richard Reeve

TOXIC

It’s unbelievable, really. Unbelievable. Why would you visit this kind of environmental catastrophe onto a region that is thriving, that is in the midst of what many of us think of as a renaissance? The future of Central Otago lies in its bike trails, vineyards, cafes, in good farming practice, and a diverse and growing population of people, young and old, who genuinely care about the future of where we live.

All aspects of life in the province will be permanently affected by the toxic presence of a mine at Thomson Gorge. The initial mining proposal (and it will only get bigger, you can be sure of that) includes four mining pits, one of which will be a kilometre long and two or three hundred metres deep. All fouling our water, risking arsenic and cyanide pollution among other poisons. Don’t even mention the mad noise, the carbon, the ruin of our rivers, land and air pollution, the road traffic, the dust… the incalculable environmental cost.

Of one thing you can be certain: If the Thomson Gorge Mine goes ahead, there will be further mining proposals to follow. Watch out, Bannockburn. Watch out, Central. Remember this – ‘fast track’ can mean hasty and fatal mistakes.

Coming in here with their bogus claims, their invented figures (’95 per cent of the locals support the mine’– come off it!), these people should be ashamed. Those of us who love Central Otago are going to fight this. Because, make no mistake, this mine would be the ruin of our region, and importantly its future.

Sam Neill – 22nd October 2025

Near turn-off to Thomson Gorge Road, Tarras
Photo: Gregory O’Brien, October 2025

Reading Poetry to Rare Lizards

SONG FOR THE TUSSOCK RANGE
           ‘I will up my eyes unto the hills …’
                                                 – Psalm 121

Deep Stream, Lee Stream, Taieri River
   and their tributary waters –
   all your lovely water-daughters,
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor –
   dear to me and ever dearer,
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor!

Deep Stream. Lee Stream, Taieri river –
   where I wandered in my childhood
   with a fishing bag and flyrod –
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor,
   dear to me and ever dearer,
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor!

Deep Stream, Lee Stream, Taieri River –
   let no profiteers deface these
   windswept, wild, beloved places –
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor,
   dear to me and ever dearer,
   Lammerlaw and Lammermoor!

David Kārena-Holmes

AT WEST ARM, LAKE MANAPOURI

Tourists on tourist buses enter
‘The Earth’s Arsehole’* (blasted, grouted,
|as though the Earth itself were buggered)
to view the powerhouse in the bowels,
where all the weight of thunderous water
that once was the glorious Waiau river,
flowing freely South to the sea,
is prisoned now in pipes and turbines
 to serve the mercilessness of man.

And so, it seems, the mythic grief
of Moturau and Koronae
(whose tears, in legend, filled this lake)
is vented in a cry transformed,
exhaled as an electric current
from generators underground,
to howl through cables strung on pylons,
gallows-grim, from here to Bluff.

Are we who turn on lights at evening,
or use the smelted aluminium,
exploiters of anguish, buggerers of the Earth?

David Kārena-Holmes
*The site of this power project was, in the construction period, known to the workers (as is, no doubt, commonly the case in such environments) as ‘The arsehole of the Earth’.   Most, or all, of the the power has gone to supply an aluminium smelter at Bluff.

Swoon

Skylark ripples the edge of silence,
icy hollows mirror its hover,
lines of dry grass quiver.

Winter’s travelling light transforms
the field of shaded frost
to shallow melt, and then, again.

Mountains drift into distance,
curve in whiteness. On either side,
hills and sky swoon at vision’s end.

Jenny Powell

Leave the arthropod alone

I saw a centipede in the crack of a rock
flipped the grey shape to view the earth underneath, watched
tiny legs scurry to safety, skittering from my unwanted gaze

I found a story in the hem of my coat
picked it apart, ripping the seam stitch by stitch
till the torn fabric, this undoing, was all I could see

I peered through a telescope at the southern sky’s gems
winced at the big-man voice next to me, joking about ladies who covet
– if only we could own them, if a man would get them for us, we’d be happy

I light the quiet fire of this poem: a resilient critter, a seam
that holds, the sparkling truth lightyears from man’s reach – these things
shining in the untouched crux

Michelle Elvy

A Faustian Bargain

Can I speak as a descendent
of Cornish tin miners?
Hunger led them to flee
to Australia and Kawau Island,
where they survived and profited
in minor ways, digging up gold and copper.
None owned a mine, some died
of the dust, and in 1867
my great-great grandfather
died in a mine collapse
in Bendigo, Victoria
leaving a widow, and nine children,
one unborn. Is the tiny opal
in my wedding ring
handed down from him?

Can I speak, knowing nothing
of this heritage before I shifted south
and my husband took me
to the old schoolhouse site
in Bendigo, Central
where we camped on the hard dryland.
Born in Tamaki Makaurau,
in view of the Waitemata
I took time to love this new land,
the forbidding mountains, cold lakes
and rivers, shimmering tussocks,
and now vineyards and tourists
annoying as they may be
bringing a more benign form of riches.

Can I speak, knowing my ancestors
left their toxic tailings,
their dams of arsenic and lead
still poisoning the water
150 years later?
Too late for apologies or compensation,
the best I can do is speak up,
say, beware these salesmen
with their promises of jobs,
and millions to be made.
Once the land is raped,
its gold stored safely in a vault
for nothing more than speculation,  
the money men will walk away
leaving land that feeds no one,

water that will slake no thirst.

Diane Brown

An Anti-Ode to Mining in Central Otago

There’s Lord Open Cast, pompous in yellow smog.
Corporate blokes raise another hair of the dog,
and pump more pollution for the water-table.
Dirty dairying brings bloody algal bloom;
so much cow urine until nitrogen’s poison,
that the arse has dropped out of the rivers.

Yes, the day looks perfect with road tar heat;
gorsebush fires flame above the lakeside beach.
Spot mad scrambles of rabbits gone to ground,
as orchards totter and grape-vine soils erode;
while every avenue is twisting itself around,
looking for the fastest way out of town.

Roadside lupins in Ophir echo purple sunsets.
Bendigo’s carbon offerings are burnt by nightfall.
A hundred per cent pure express their distance,
when smell of decayed possum chokes the air.
Don’t let land’s dirge be your billy-can of stew,
the petrol reek of your tail-finned septic tank.

Tailings will anchor environs turned unstable.
Once hymns were sung to hum of the tuning fork,
as the ruru called out, Morepork, morepork;
now drills hit post-lapsarian pay-dirt,
just where Rūaumoko rocks an iron cradle,
and the raft of Kupe fades to a roof of stars.

They would mine hills hollow because earth shines gold.
Clouds packed in sacks, a bale-hook making way.
Hear creeks burble and croon in violin tones,
over lost honey-thunder of long-gone bees.
Join the boom and bust of prize pie in the sky;
chase lizards of rain running down bulldozed trees.

David Eggleton

The Underside

Under the house the dust is dry
as an archaeologist’s brush, stippled
by the motionless rain of those particulars
that make our bodies, my body
groping, stooped and short-sighted,
under the loom of joists and time.

In this lumber room of mothlight
and clotted webs are countless lives
burrowing down and flitting between.

There is a workbench, joyously scarred.
There are bedsprings for sleeping bones.
There are scaffolding planks, rusty bricks,
the cheek of the hill that holds us up.
There is fire and there are stars
beneath this upturned palm
on which the piles of our home tremble.

And beyond, the astringent glory
of brindled hills that calls me to dwell
on the underside: this drowning-fear
that has us scrabbling up the ladder
of never enough, forgetting the ground
it foots upon. This lapse in listening to
the depositions of the earth.

Megan Kitching

nothing to do with you

For a cup of coffee,
you would strike the heart

with an axe, mine stone
for its marrow.

Maim
what rolls on into sky. Screw

metal poles into quiet land,
warp and crush

its offer
of light and air.

*

For greed,
on whenua

nothing to do with with you,
you would trammel

quilted, southern ground, leave
a trail of stains,

thrust twisted iron
nto its soft belly.

*

Rocks the wind or sun
cannot move, sleep on.

Tussock-backed
they carry soft gold

sound
we can hear for miles.

From somewhere,
a farmer

calls his dogs. Somewhere
the blaring throats

of young bulls
we cannot see.

Under our feet the gravel
coughs. Fallen apples

form a wild carpet
below a crooked tree.

*

The mist freezes
where it wafts, solid

lace. Cold, bloodless
and beautiful. Still for days

on end, the sun a smear
across the sky’s white mouth.

Bulrushes stuck fast
in frozen ponds. 

Willows and poplars
as wan as horse-hair.

*

In summer, the grasshopper
screams. In summer

the road floats
grey. Purple lupins

and orange poppies
dribble paint.

When we stop the car
we hear overhead

a pair of paradise ducks,
their alternating cries

the unfenced sound
of a mountain tarn.

*

Seized by the sun,
valleys do not resist

the line and fall
of riverbeds and trees.

On whenua
nothing to do with you, somewhere

the sound of a tiny bird.
Somewhere, lovely light,

the sound of nothing, of no one,
of the air.

*

Kay McKenzie Cooke
This poem, ‘nothing to do with you’, differs slightly from the original published in the book Made For Weather (Otago University Press, 2007).

Burn

It’s Brian Turner rolling around in the bed 
of a dry burn. Ghost poet 
Brian Turner galloping the fence line, hunched over a hockey stick.
Brian Turner, order of merit, 
spectral at a precipice,
rubbing scree in his beard.
Brian Turner opens his mouth and out comes the roar of the sun.
The broom fries.
The hawks microwave.
Ghost poet Brian Turner teleports up and
kicks at the plateau with a heel.
To the living, the clouds are invisible.
But, squirting over stones, the skinks have
Brian Turner’s tiny eyes.
Tussock have his hands, the wind
his keys.
The hilltops had hoped to be rid of him.
And they are.

Nick Ascroft

Otago: A Ballad (golden version)

Another golden Aussie
in his big golden truck,
crossing the water
to try his golden luck.

Rips up the golden tussock.
Digs a golden hole.
Finds a lot of rock
and a bit of golden gold.

While Shane and all his buddies
stand around and cheer
in a land called Desolation.  
No vision. No idea.

But they take their golden pennies,
buy a house, a car, a yacht.
And they sail away
on a plastic sea,
to nowhere you
would want to be.

On this barren rock
they’ve scraped blood red,
trashed and burned
and left for dead. 

Leaving us nowhere to run.
Circling round and round the sun.

Ripped out our heart.
our breathing space.

This golden land
that was our place. 

Fiona Farrell

Mine
i.m. Pike River miners 19 November 2010

Son, there was a time when you were mine
Brother, when the shining day was ours
Friend, there was an hour when all went well
Darling, for a moment we were love
Father, you were always close at hand
Human, we were people of the light.

And now, the mountain says ‘he’s mine’‚
And now, the rivers say ‘he’s ours’‚
And now, the darkness says ‘my friend’‚
And now, the silence says ‘my love’‚
And now, the coal says ‘father time’‚
And now, we wait for the day to dawn.

Jeffrey Paparoa Holman
from Blood Ties, Selected Poems (Canterbury University Press, 2017)

This is something of a raw topic for me, given my background as a miner’s son, growing up in a mining town. I’ve just looked in my copy of Blood Ties, Selected Poems, from 2017, and there is a section there with twenty poems related to mining and miners, much of it related to my growing up in Blackball. There are three poems there that speak to Pike River, a sore wound at the moment, with the film’s premiere in Greymouth last night.  I have a family member who could not face going. Her father died in the Strongman Mine explosion in 1967, when nineteen miners lost their lives. JPH

The Blue Language

In our local park, five welcome-swallows
swoop and dart for midges, their red chests
swell as they sing their high, sky dialect;
the thin vowels in their lyric glint as if rung
from glass bells blown in South Pacific blue.

The quintet shifts, leans in the italics of speed:
moves now like mobile acrostics,
now a faithful, swaying congregation
every bone adoring air

until an unseasonal despotic wind
flings them out of sight  —
scatters twigs, dirt, smashed tail-light, laundry, leaves and newspapers
like those that reported how, across Greece,

thousands of migratory swallows dropped
on streets, balconies, islands and a lake,
small hearts inert
as ripped sheet music.

In our throats, the wild losses dilate,
squat like rock salt
in a browning rose

a grief clot, untranslatable.

Emma Neale

Note: There is a shadow of the phrase ‘the green language’ here; also known as la langue verte; in Jewish mysticism, Renaissance magic, and alchemy, this was a name for the language of birds; often thought to attain perfection and offer revelation. Also see ‘High winds kill thousands of migratory birds in disaster over Greece’, Guardian, April 2020.

E hoa mā, please buy No Other Place to Stand: An Anthology of Climate Change Poetry from Aotearoa New Zealand Edited by Jordan Hamel, Rebecca Hawkes, Erik Kennedy and Essa Ranapiri (Auckland University Press, 2022)

Mining Lament

I went to see the golden hill
but it had all been mined away
all that’s left is an empty bowl
of yellow gorse and rutted clay

But it had all been mined away
except a clay bluff topped with stone
in yellow gorse and rutted clay
one stubborn relic stands alone

Only a clay bluff tipped with stone
remains of the hill the painter saw
one stubborn relic stands alone
of a rounded hill of golden ore

Remains of the hill the painter saw
rutted clay and a stumbling stream
a rounded hill of golden ore
sluiced away with a sluicing gun

Rutted clay and a stumbling stream
all that’s left is an empty bowl
sluiced away with a sluicing gun
I went to see the golden hill

(after a painting by Christopher Aubrey, c. 1870 of Round Hill, Aparima, Southland)

Cilla McQueen
from The Radio Room (Otago University Press, 2010)

Thomson Gorge, Gregory O’Brien, Oct 2025

Old Prayer

Hawk, as you
lift and flare
above the river’s
slide, take us not
in thy talons. Take us not
from the bank
or branch or wrench us
from the earth, lifted by
calamitous wings.
Fix us not with your eye.
Take us not up
the way you raise the sparrow
and the finch. Leave us
as the covey of quail
in the willow.
Leave us be.

Jenny Bornholdt
from Lost and Somewhere Else (Victoria University Press, 2019)

Gorge

 

Somewhere

   in deep time, this collection of

      chemical / isotopic / insoluble

         composition signatures rises 

            and falls —

               and falls —

                  falls —

                     rises

 

                  No one still, silent surface

               along this space

           in this intense South,

         Gwondwana: floods, grey-washed

      avalanches, rumbling glaciers,                 slips 

hot water rushing through cracks

   engorging crystalline schist

      with veins of quartz

         layers of platy mineral grains

             { graphite, pyrite, arsenopyrite }

 

                Variations roaring through endless seasons

                    myriad     manifolds        must   melt

                         surfaces             scrape

                                                gales    salve

                        escarpment      creep

                  alps            keen,    pine,    take

             Glaciers loose from time 

      Ice must, is

   grey,  weathering

heat, rousing           

  Mata Au quickening

      Give, heave, cleave, groan

 

         water milky blue, rock particles

             scattering sunlight beginning and beginning and

 

 

Fast track to hammer / / Fast track to tamper \ \ Fast track to “explore”, drill,  dredge, bore / / Fast track to gorge gorge gorge  \ \  Fast track to contamination / / Fast track to hollowed out  \ \  Fast track to haunted  / / Fast track to dust  \ \ Fast track to coarse-veined lies / / Fast track to nowhere \ \  Fast track to what would the real Santana, St Anna, say?  / / / Sancta Ana, ora pro nobis.

 

Annabel Wilson

 

 

a suitable machine for the millions
for/after Hannah Hayes

forge and smithy
durability before cheapness
do the work of a dozen men

colonise
settle, spin the wheel
first cost, last cost, stop

the machine
if necessary check
up press and guard before

you start up
all cut, all shaped
all mannered the same two

tubes snug
one turns another
turns one turns a way

to make
it work invention
is the mother on two

wheels
and everything
is material or it is

immaterial
floating, dust
between us

Liz Breslin
from show you’re working out, (Dead Bird Books, 2025)

Stone

After all, stones remember
the opening and closing of oceans
the thrust of volcanoes; they remember,
in their sediments, ancient creatures and trees,
rivers, lakes and glaciations.
After all
stone is the firmness
in the world. It offers landfall,
a hand-hold, reception. It is
a founding father with a mother-tongue.
You can hear it in the gravity
of your body. You can hear it
with the bones of your body.
You can hardly hear it.
See that line of coast…
See the ranges ranging…
they seem to be
saying
after you,
after you,
after all…

Dinah Hawken
from Ocean and Stone (Victoria University Press, 2015)

Māori Point Road, Tarras

You and not I, notice the change in light at this time. On my side, it’s all busted
rough-chewed grass, stink of silage, black bulls in drenched paddocks. Rusted
mailboxes punctuate the long gravel line. Drenched sheep. We are haunted
by the chortle of a trapped magpie, the Judas bird made to betray. The black glove comes down once a day.

On your side, twilight bathes paddocks Steinlager green, all the way to those
wedding cake Buchanans, the white crown in the distance. The human need to
see shapes in things: a rock that looks like a wing. We carry on, not speaking.
We carry on not speaking. You know I want to ask you something.

Annabel Wilson

Substratum

We are so vulnerable here.
Our time on earth a time of
how to keep warm and how to be
fed and how to quell our most
anxious thoughts which come back
and back to connection.

How do we stay here on this earth
which is right below our feet?
Soil, clay, substrates of rock,
magma, lava, water, oil, gas;
the things we want to bring up and use,
the things we want to use up.

If all we ever wanted was to know
we would be warm and fed and listened to,
would we be kinder?
Would we in turn listen? Would we understand
the importance of those close to us
and the importance of what is under us?

We have the far sight. And we are what
the shamans warned against.

Jillian Sullivan
Previously published in Poems4Peace, Printable Reality

Deserts, for Instance

The loveliest places of all
are those that look as if
there’s nothing there
to those still learning to look

Brian Turner
from Just This (Victoria University Press, 2009)

Ōpawaho Heathcote River

As a child we fished and swam the Ōpawaho
Now Ōpawaho is muddy full of silt 
unswimmable unfishable for days after rain

as cars leach poisons, some factories spill metals,
subdivisions and farms without 20 metre wide riparian plantings spread, 
as shallow rooting pine forests get blown and burn
Opawaho’s waters grow thick with mud sediment and poisons

For our tamariki to swim and play safely in our river
we want 20 metre wide riparian plantings on each side of any stream or creek flowing into the awa
where the awa flows muddy we can plant raupo  

build flax weirs to stop sediment with holes to let fish through
lay oyster shells on the river floor 
Any other ideas let us know 

Ōpawaho pollution is our mamae pain
Her harikoa joy brings smiles to the faces of our people
Her rongoa healing restores our wetland home

Kathleen Gallagher

Great Men
(after Brecht)

‘Great Men say dumb things.’

   And then they do them.
When that plumped-up someone
   is trying to talk to you about themselves
and they are using ‘fat word’ you can be
   sure they are as spindle-shanked in heart
as anyone can be. ’The dumbness of their
   third-rate ideas’ not even a tattered wonder.
And you know that whenever they are
   smooth-talking about peace, they are preparing
the war-machine. Just to show you how dumb
  they really are, they keep talking to each other
about how they are going to live forever. 

 

Michael Harlow
from Landfall 243, 2022

Poet’s note: Bertolt Brecht was a Poet, Playwright, and Theatre Director. He was renowned for  The Three Penny Opera, and his most famous plays Mother Courage and Children, and The Caucasian Chalk Circle. His most famous quotation: ’Terrible is the Temptation to be Good’. As a Marxist and Poet he was noted for his social and political criticism.

Thomson Gorge Road Song

“Those people who have sought to deify our wilderness … those days are over. We are not going to sit around and read poetry to rare lizards, whilst our current account deficit goes down the gurgler… If there is a mining opportunity and it’s impeded by a blind frog, goodbye Freddy”. (Shane Jones, Minister of Resources, May 2025)

Stand me a while
in this warming stream then
stay me with flagons, apples—

the sustainable industries
of each numbered morning.  Or bury me
in arsenic, in heavy metals,

blanket me in blackened earth
and scatter my ashes
beside the Mata-Au,

in the bright orange of its contaminated
flow. Bury but do not forget me
under what was once

a greenwood, then lay that ailing tree
to rest beside me. Steady
and sustain me, streets

of the noble town
of Alexandra, strike up
your municipal band and

bring on the blossom princesses
of early spring. Forget if you can
this season’s toxic bloom.

Bury me in sodium cyanide,
then set me adrift
as toxic dust, carry me high above

your ruined waters, your tailings.
Bury me
in spurious claims, the cheery sighing

of cash registers, volatile stocks
and the non-refundable deposits of a town
that goes boom. Lay me down

in bedrock and slurry,
in overburden and paydirt,
fast-track me to the next life.

Bury me
under the freshly laid asphalt
of Thomson Gorge Road

in gravel and aggregate—bury me there,
beneath your highway
to hell, but please don’t take me

all the way with you, Minister Jones.
Play instead this song on every stringed instrument
of the province: on the wiring of

O’Connell’s Bridge, each note
strung out on vineyard wiring
and well-tempered,

rabbit-proof fencing. Sing me this
open-cast, sky-high song
above Rise & Shine Valley,

bury me in the company of
the last native frog of Dunstan,
the last attentive lizard,

lay me to rest, this once quiet road
my pillow, sing me this song
but do not wake me.

Gregory O’Brien

Poetry Shelf Protests: in support of nurses, doctors, teachers

Catastrophe and calamity slip
through like fettuccine
but I close my eyes
to the unbearable pain of humanity
and picture myself on Te Henga’s tideline

A nurse asks if I need anything
even when she is rushed off her feet
I sip Chia Sisters ginger and turmeric juice
hoping beyond hope for world peace

I think the whole world is made of strips,
strips of good and evil
strips of story and strips of song

It’s a solid square of inedible fish pie
slathered in Thai coconut sauce that reminds me
of cotton wool and saltless sea foam

Living the moment is my way
of inhabiting the serene Lake of Good Thoughts

The nurse has come in on her holiday
to change my dressing and tell me
how well I am doing and how cold
it is outside

The night nurse tiptoes in
uses the night light from there to here
and it’s a sweet soft voice and it’s darling
and it’s floating on the water

It’s crescent eyes looking at the moon It’s stars
and patches of pitch-black dark

At dawn the air conditioning
is the sound of rain on a tin roof
and then water dripping in distant bush

Later it’s the ocean’s ebb and flow
collapsing in a single beat
sometimes an engine purring like a waterfall

The nurse sings
when she takes my blood
and changes my dressing
The clouds sing
when they sit outside
the window like favourite
albums from the 1970s

Living in the present tense
I bake a tiny poem
from the little words in
the little bucket I carry
in the little room in
my little bookshelf head

The nurse is tired
of working long hours
but they wipe my brow
and gently blow away my fever
down the corridor, down the lift
to an outside wind that whisks
heat and hurt far far away
to a Scottish loch

Paula Green
from The Venetian Blind Poems, The Cuba Press, 2025

Today I stand with nurses and doctors on strike, holding an enormous placard calling for better pay, increased staffing, better access to equipment and drugs available overseas. I am holding a copy of my new collection The Venetian Blind Poems because this book is dedicated to everyone on Mountains of Difficulty, including support crews. And that includes our incredible doctors and nurses, such as the ones that have guided me through a stem cell transplant and are currently going beyond the call of duty on my challenging recovery road. I look back on my time in Motutapu Ward and visiting the Day Stay Ward over the past three years, with extreme love. Why? I have loved this time because I have witnessed humanity at its very best, the extraordinary patience and kindness and skills of our health practitioners, no matter how overworked and unpaid and under-serviced they are.

We must continue to protest. We must continue to demand major investment in our breaking health system, choices that will significantly improve the wellbeing of nurses and doctors as well as patients and that will build better outcomes and more up-to-date treatments.

Honestly, I feel like crying, it feels so unfair our Government refuses to do its very best to make lives in Aotearoa matter.

Poetry Shelf review: Dick Frizzell’s Gow Langsford Gallery show and boyhood memoir

Hastings: A Boy’s Own Adventure, Dick Frizzell
Massey University Press, 2025

I purposefully saved Dick Frizzell’s new memoir, Hastings: A Boy’s Own Adventure, to read when Gow Langsford exhibition, ‘The Weight of the World’, was on. It’s not very often you get to inhabit an artist’s childhood and their latest work in the same viewing/reading. I am fascinated how the past can shine multiple lights on the present, and how the present can open fertile windows on the past.

Let me say from the outset, I adored the book and I adored the show. Dick begins his memoir with a key question: “How, or how not, to write a memoir? I’m slowly coming to the conclusion that there’s no right way to do it.” He opts to draw upon both truth and fiction: “a little memory, a little licence and a lot of humour”. He lays down a story frame guided by real life then fills in the gaps guided by imagination and wit. The result is an utterly readable voice, infused with an enthusiasm for life, for writing and for making art. An infectious voice, a voice that nails the rhythm of writing, speaking, revealing.

Dick was born in Auckland, moved to Hastings as a young boy, where he suggests living In Hastings, Napier, Clive and the Heretaunga plains felt like living at the centre of universe. It was a locus of escapades, delights and fascinations, with a drawcard library housing metaphorical and literal alleyways of ‘head-spinning’ books. There was the attraction to comics and a desire to copy them, the first encounter with paint on a tin roof, the school art room a beloved hideaway, shooting fish in a barrel, siblings galore, including a temporary stand-in brother.

There is a brilliant series of children’s books (Little Books, Big Dreams) published in the UK that offer miniature biographies of inspirational figures across time (Bob Marley, Virginia Woolf, Leo Messi, Frida Kahlo, Salvador Dali, David Attenborough to name a few). What I love about them, especially in these out-of-kilter times, is how they focus on childhood, on how sparks were ignited and seeds planted, often against all odds, and how the dreams of the child were allowed to find flight and anchor, and how the child could roam and delve and discover.

Reading Dick’s memoir I absorb a fascinating portrait of a time and place, within the shifting tides and trends of the 1950s and 1960s and, within that, the genesis of an artist. I am utterly moved by the portrait of Dick’s mother, a woman who was drawn to arts and craft, as so many women were of her generation, how a “she went to art school but was no bohemian”, stocked the house to the brim with art hobbies, played in skiffle bands, favoured the full glass of happiness. When Dick was in hospital after appendix surgery, his mum brought him art materials and everyone wanted him to draw them something. Wow!

Voice carries family, Robert Sullivan once said. Well voice carries memoir, and this memoir nails voice. It’s in the rhythm, it’s in the wit and detail, it’s in the grey areas (“Yes I know she was my mother, but who the hell was she?”). More than anything, it’s in the multiple dirt roads of boyhood that make an exhibition of landscape paintings even richer viewing.

Gate, 2025, oil on canvas, 700 mm x 900 mm

I am standing in the middle of Dick’s show, mesmerised. An opening chapter of the memoir places a map on Hastings, and this feels like a painterly map on experienced landscapes. How will I navigate my way through hills and sky and vegetation? Viewing art, like reading poetry, offers many trails, eye-catching vantage points, vital epiphanies. On this occasion, I am drawn into the familiar, a palette that is both restrained and vibrant, with shifting lights, the shimmer of brush upon hill and tree (especially trees!). I move from the intensified blue of a sky to shadows that loom across a wet paddock, loitering by a gate that invites (or forbids?) entry, almost feeling feet crunch into the texture of the dirt roads.

Why do I love this show so much? It’s not just standing within a nose-breath of the rural vistas, but finger-tapping lines of nostalgia. It’s admiring the visibility of brush stokes and painterly movement, and it’s the way each work is a repository for story. Where does this painting transport me? I get an extra taste of viewing uplift when I am at the show, sharing the space with a number of other captivated viewers. People are talking about the work nonstop, talking art, memory, story, place. One minute I am thinking the painting ‘Corn’ carries a whiff of Van Gogh and the next minute, a couple further along are saying the same thing. Everyone is talking paint and sky, tree and memory, and I wish Dick could witness it.

The Weight of the World, 2025, oil on canvas, 1800 mm x 2400 mm

I come back to the title of the show, which is also the title of a work. The painting features a huge stack of hacked tree stumps that block out the wider view and light, the everyday and the beauty that we see in the other paintings. This tree stump mound might be symbol or politics or personal anecdotes. Or simply cue the viewer to the visual attraction of gnarly muscular bark in a gnarly muscular pattern, that is taking visual delight in detail at a distance from postcard beauty. Yet couple the work’s title with one of the largest works in the show, ‘Milling Whakaangiangi’ (2025), it is impossible not to be reminded of the contentious deforestation of the land with its subsequent impact on soil and climate. The weight of the world indeed.

As reader, writer and spectator, I am boosted by art and poetry that gets me thinking, feeling, sidetracking. Heart mind eye, maybe even skin. Take ‘Sea View Castlepoint’, where the thin gap on the thin dirt road between the bulging trees affords a thin sea view, and there I go, sinking into the thin view as I widen it into the light of the world.

Sea View Castlepoint, 2025, oil on canvas, 700 mm x 900 mm

I am midway through Dick’s memoir as I view the show, and it feels like his paintings frame the landscape with a hint of the roving and fascinated eye of the child and his burgeoning creativity. Stop and view the trimmed hedge, the dark poplars, the whitebaiter’s huts, the dirt road, the wind swept tree, another dark tree. How easily I might become immune to my local landscape, the view out the car window, the paddocks up the road, but standing in the gallery space, absorbing the initial impact of light, colour and texture, I am immeasurably moved by the points of view, the way the gravel road hums with both journey and destination, the way an enthusiasm for comic books as a young boy, grew into myriad enthusiasms and, how on this occasion, an enthusiasm for patterns and detail in these experienced landscapes, in the quotidian and the physical, is utterly contagious. Wow!

Trimmed Hedge, 2024, oil on canvas, 400 mm x 500 mm

Massey University Press website
Gow Langsford Gallery website

Dick Frizzell MNZM is one of New Zealand’s best-known painters. He studied at the Ilam School of Fine Arts at the University of Canterbury from 1960 to 1963 and then had a long career in advertising. Alongside his career as a painter, Frizzell is also the highly sought-after designer of a range of products from toys to wine. He is the author of Dick Frizzell: The Painter (Random House, 2009), It’s All About the Image (Random House, 2011) Me, According to the History of Art (Massey University Press, 2020) and The Sun Is A Star (Massey University Press, 2021). Dick exhibits regularly and often works in collaborations with writers and other artists. He lives in Auckland with his wife, Jude.

Dick Frizzell

With a remarkably diverse repertoire of imagery and styles, Dick has created a unique body of work. His output includes works of landscape, cartoonish portraits, works of homage to notable artists including Picasso and McCahon, pointedly kitsch kiwiana, text-based artworks, abstract paintings, and much more. He has exhibited extensively, with career highlights that include the major travelling retrospective Dick Frizzell: Portrait of a Serious Artiste (City Gallery, Wellington, 1997), his residency in Antarctica as part of the Invitational Artist Programme (2005) and the publication of the monograph Dick Frizzell: The Painter (Random House NZ, 2009). His work is now held in collections throughout the country, most notably Christchurch Art Gallery, The Chartwell Collection, Auckland Art Gallery and Te Papa, Museum of New Zealand.