Iain Lonie (1932–1988), poet and classical
scholar, was a contemporary of Brasch, Baxter and Tuwhare, yet unlike these
well-known figures Lonie has been strikingly absent from the map of New Zealand
poetry.
A
Place To Go On From: The collected poems of Iain Lonie, edited by David Howard, makes available a rich and astounding body
of work. As Damian Love says in his essay: to read Lonie now is ‘for most of
us, practically to discover a new resource.’
Lonie published five books of poetry and
wrote numerous other poems that never appeared in print. ‘The pieces he chose
to publish are less striking than those he left on the shelf. If “Elegy to
Maecenas”, “Short Story” and “Ugolino and His Sons” had been known by the close
of the 1960s then readers might have visited regularly rather than passing by,’
says editor David Howard.
The premature
death of his wife Judith had a profound impact on Lonie’s life and work. With clarity, wit and precision he intimately
mapped the borders of death, desire, grief and love.
Lonie’s quiet music, his intimate,
personalised subjects, and deft handling of cadence, gave a subtlety to his
work that did not conform to the celebrated mode of his day. Yet his deep
integrity to the poetic art prefigured developments to come.
‘Lonie’s poetry,’ says David Howard, can
now be seen as ‘a major precursor of the personalist domestic mode that came to
dominate New Zealand poetry in the decades after his death through figures as
diverse as Geoff Cochrane and Jenny Bornholdt’.
This definitive edition, with over a
hundred previously unpublished poems, supported by notes that draw from diaries
and letters, makes available ‘a body of poems on love and grief and the searing
currents of remembrance that, in New Zealand writing, stands alone,’ says Poet
Laureate Vincent O’Sullivan.
For younger poets, Lonie’s poetry has
become ‘a place to go on from’.
A
Place To Go On From
The
Collected Poems of Iain Lonie
Edited by
David Howard
Release Date: May 2015
ISBN 978-1-927322-01-7, $50
jacketed hardback with ribbon
www.facebook.com/OtagoUniversityPress
Editor, David Howard co-founded Takahē magazine (1989), spent 35
years writing The Incomplete Poems (Cold Hub Press, 2011), and
collaborated with the artist Peter Ransom on You Look So Pretty When
You’re Unfaithful to Me (Holloway Press, 2012). He has received the New
Zealand Society of Authors Mid-Career Writers’ Award (2009), the University
of South Pacific Poetry Prize (2011), the Robert Burns Fellowship (2013), and
the Otago Wallace Residency (2014).
|
No comments:
Post a Comment