Here’s what he wrote a few days before the launch:
"Tomorrow I am receiving advance copies of my new poetry
anthology... it will be
launched next Sunday by Fiona Kidman here in Wellington . Kate Camp and Vince O’Sullivan
will read a poem apiece. I am excited, indeed thrilled. It represents over five
years' work. In some respects it represents a lifetime of teaching and reading
poetry.
The book has 100New Zealand
poems that I have loved - a selection of poems which (as I say in the
Introduction), 'down the years or in some cases only recently, have settled in
my mental household, comfortable and available, a satisfactory source of
reflection and contemplation. To a considerable extent they represent who I am,
or maybe, more honestly, the person I would like to be. They represent my
upbringing, my temperament, my interests, and my hopes.’
As well as the poems I have linking descriptions as to why I’ve chosen them. For example, Ruth Dallas’s ‘Milking Before Dawn’ represents an early school lesson from 1960, a success that shaped my career. As a school-boy myself I had three idyllic years atAkaroa
District High
School . So for the cover I helped select an
aerial photograph of Akaroa
Harbour with Onawe
peninsula. The volcanic plug on the old weathered crater was the subject of the
first New Zealand
poem I was ever introduced to… With my ill-health it is likely to be my
swan-song collection. I am delighted to have compiled it."
The book has 100
As well as the poems I have linking descriptions as to why I’ve chosen them. For example, Ruth Dallas’s ‘Milking Before Dawn’ represents an early school lesson from 1960, a success that shaped my career. As a school-boy myself I had three idyllic years at
”There’s something marvelous and exhilarating and absolutely
special about gathering with friends for the 10th day of the 10th month of the
10th year of the century. It feels like a unique moment in time. The Greek
philosopher Pythagoras saw 10 as the symbol of the universe and of expressing
the whole of human knowledge…
It does seem to me that this idea of the whole of
human knowledge rings one or two bells here as, on this 10th day, we launch a
collection of one man’s poetic human knowledge, distilled into those poems he
loves the best...100 New Zealand poems that have caught his attention, lingered
in his memory, and stayed there as lasting sentinels, totem poles if you like,
to his lifelong love of language and poetry. Or to put it another way, as a
beacon to the wider life of the mind, a way into learning and understanding
that which is important.
It’s no real surprise to those of us who love poetry that, although poetry
falls on hard times, it never dies. The voice of the poet is always with us,
the singing words that resonate in our heads, are carried like emblems of grief
and happiness, there to sustain us in good times and bad. The music of poetry
embedded in our subconscious simply never leaves us, or not the best of it,
those which we love the most…”