Agnostic.com

7 5

Do you appreciate philosophical poetry?

do you have favourite poets?

one of my few darling poetic philosophers is Michael Leunig; he is very contemporary, gentle in an almost melancholic way, unambiguous & full of heart. he doesn't shy from any unpleasantness in current affairs either, & tackles them with a rebellious spirit.

walklightly 8 Mar 1
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

7 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

@walklightly have you watched "Sunday too far Away" starring a youngish Jack Thompson? It was set in the mid 1950's. Many will find it brutal but in fact it is of the character that was Australia and Leunig still is. A character that has been subverted by crass commercialism and loss of individuality.
Here from the Northern Territories former Administrator:

thank you for the fun, FrayedBear. that was hilarious; i'd just have liked to meet at least one woman "in the outback of australia" 😉

@walklightly Can't introduce you to anything other than books:

  1. In 1902 Jeannie Gunn, a Melbourne schoolteacher, went with her new husband to live on the remote Elsey cattle station near the Roper River in the Northern Territory. Though she spent little more than a year there, her experiences in the outback and her contact with the local Aborigines impressed her deeply, and on her return to Melbourne she set down her recollections in two books, We of the Never Never and the Little Black Princess.
    2. The Shiralee
    by Darcy Niland
Everyone has their cross to bear – their swag, their shiralee – and for Macauley, walking across New South Wales in search of work, it is his young daughter who has to suffer his resentment at having her in tow. But then, he discovers that the ties that bind can be as much a comfort as a burden, and what he thought of as his Shiralee could be the one thing that will save him from himself.
3.The Secret River
by Kate Grenville
In 1806 William Thornhill, a man of quick temper and deep feelings, is transported from the slums of London to New South Wales for the term of his natural life. With his wife Sal and their children he arrives in a harsh land he cannot understand.
But the colony can turn a convict into a free man. Eight years later Thornhill sails up the Hawkesbury to claim a hundred acres for himself.
4. Try also [en.m.wikipedia.org]

@FrayedBear, thanks for the suggestions of which i've read 'the shiralee' when i was 11, & again a few decades later. very raw in a minimalist & melancholic way. i'll check out the others.

i've just watched "sunday too far away" &, yeah, it's a bit feral & basically confirms what i've gleaned so far of aussie machism of the 20th century.

@walklightly I suggest that you failed to understand it. Instead simply overlaying what you wish to believe without considering the real why's.

1

I don't go into raptures over poetry, some I like, some is meh.

fair enough; i'm the same. still, i think Michael Leunig is a star 🙂

2

I've poems that I like in general, but it's not something I've ever pursued intentionally. I recently bought "The Ode Less Traveled" by Stephen Fry and I'm about a third of the way through it. I thought making an attempt to write it would be an interesting personal challenge. I'll check out Michael Leunig, thanks!

thanks for the "ode less travelled" hint. i like Stephen Fry.

2

Leunig is adorable. He is Australian.

Although I reside in Nashville, Tennessee, and was born in the UK, I lived in Australia for twenty years, and my social development is Australian. I still have friends of a lifetime there, and due to the political and anti-Intelectual vibe here in the US, I have been considering moving back to Oz. Leunig embodies all that is aesthetic about the antipodes, and has such a light touch. Thank you so much for both posting and appreciating.

In Nashville, they invite you home to dinner, and don’t give you the address !!

In Victoria they invite not.

ha! christhepiano, i have been considering moving back to europe for exactly the reasons of nanny-state aka fascist politics & intellect deprivation... so reconsider!

@walklightly
I greatly appreciate your feedback. For all the reasons that you mention, as intectuall insurance, I purchased a home in Newark, UK, two years ago. Newark is a medieval 12th century market town, an hour from London, and with regional airports that offer easy access to Europe. And, of course, the trains go everywhere. Thank you so much for your thoughts.

you're welcome, @christhepiano! very clever too!

3

Never considered his writings to be poems. But they are!

3

Dante I guess, but poetry overall, maybe Bruce Dawe.

4

Leunig is an awesome cartoonist.

Leunig is talented

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:31012
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.