Poem for John
By Alison Croggon
You ask for a poem
and I say
I have no poem
here the sky
which embraces both of us
in this single world
is blue
and I read
that birds sing
between the bombs
in Iraq
no balance
no consolation
and no answer
as the angel of history
turns its vengeful face
towards us all
you are right
we need poems
as we need bread
we hunger for that blue
human milk
to nourish our largeness
to minister our pain
and our love
here is your poem
(From Ash, Cusp Books, LA 2006. ©
Alison Croggon)
Both poem and photograph are copyright, and are used with permission.
I first met Alison Croggon when she was a young poet in Melbourne in the early eighties, and already one of Australia's most beautiful lyric poets. She had worked as a journalist, and I remember thinking what an asset that must be to a poet — all that training in cutting out unnecessary words.
Her first book of poetry, This is the Stone, won two of Australia's most prestigious poetry prizes, the Anne Elder Award (for a first book of poetry) and the Dame Mary Gilmore Prize. She is also a successful playwright, fantasy novelist and librettist. She continued with the journalism, well-known as a theatre critic writing for literary publications and more recently in her blog, Theatre Notes.
Her website is the best place to find out more about Alison, with links to her wonderful fantasy series, her 'biography that explains everything', other poems, and lots more. Don't forget to look for further links from these links. You can find her books at her Amazon page.
I admire all her poetry, which does uniquely beautiful things with language. This particular piece appeals to me in its simple directness and its restraint — and of course for what it says in its conclusion.
Both poem and photograph are copyright, and are used with permission.
I first met Alison Croggon when she was a young poet in Melbourne in the early eighties, and already one of Australia's most beautiful lyric poets. She had worked as a journalist, and I remember thinking what an asset that must be to a poet — all that training in cutting out unnecessary words.
Her first book of poetry, This is the Stone, won two of Australia's most prestigious poetry prizes, the Anne Elder Award (for a first book of poetry) and the Dame Mary Gilmore Prize. She is also a successful playwright, fantasy novelist and librettist. She continued with the journalism, well-known as a theatre critic writing for literary publications and more recently in her blog, Theatre Notes.
Her website is the best place to find out more about Alison, with links to her wonderful fantasy series, her 'biography that explains everything', other poems, and lots more. Don't forget to look for further links from these links. You can find her books at her Amazon page.
I admire all her poetry, which does uniquely beautiful things with language. This particular piece appeals to me in its simple directness and its restraint — and of course for what it says in its conclusion.
Poems and photos used in ‘I Wish I’d Written
This’ remain the property of the copyright holders (usually their authors).