Monday, March 03, 2025

Other Worlds: An Exhibition

(Auckland Central Library: 19/2-2/8/25)

Frederick Pohl: The Way the Future Was (1979)


The Way the Future Was. Ever since I first came across it, I've felt that the title of Frederick Pohl's mid-career memoir summed up the field of Science Fiction pretty exactly.

For all its emphasis on futuristic prediction and the pending triumphs of technology, SF (whether you read that acronym as "Science Fiction" or the more inclusive "Speculative Fiction") has always been an intensely nostalgic genre.


Other Worlds, curated by Andrew Henry & Renee Orr (19 February - 2 August 2025)


You feel it the moment you walk in the door of Other Worlds, the latest exhibition in the Rare Books Room at Auckland's Central City Library, an exploration of the "imaginative worlds of science fiction ... featuring books, magazines, comics and posters from Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections."


Simon Tate: Auckland Council Libraries (2025)


The curators' decision to focus on old SF magazine covers to create an immediate visual effect was an inspired one. The exuberance and inventiveness of the artists who illustrated these old pulp magazines was propelled not so much by aesthetic considerations as by the sheer strength of the competition.

They had to stand out against all the other possibilities on the newstand: the toney, uptown slicks; the plethora of True Crime and True Detective titles; and even the last few remaining shockers: the EC horror comics or Weird Tales - almost all of them equally attractive (or garish, depending on your taste).


Frank Herbert: The Prophet of Dune (1965)


And yet, look at this cover from the original run of Dune in Analog in the early 1960s. Has there ever been a more majestic rendition of a Sandworm in any of the subsequent book-covers or movies?

"Shai Hulud!" I found myself intoning as I saw it, "Bless the Maker and His water. May His passage cleanse the world." I am, as you may have gathered, an abject fan of the grandeur of Frank Herbert's conception, ever since I first read it more years ago than I care to mention ...



Fritz Lang, dir. Metropolis, music by Giorgio Moroder (1924 / 1984)


That's not all you see when you first go in, though. In accordance with that sense of nostalgia I mentioned above, there was an old flickering black-and-white movie being projected on the back wall: possibly the greatest SF movie ever made - certainly among the most influential - Fritz Lang's Metropolis.

It's a masterpiece no matter which version you watch it in (there are many - of varying lengths and degrees of completeness). It's probably a relic of having come of age in the 1980s, but I still can't get past the experience of first seeing it in full in the 1984 version scored by Giorgio Moroder.

Moroder colourised the scenes, which might sound sacrilegious if you didn't realise that that was how feature films were generally projected in the 1920s - just like those classical marble nudes we admire so much which were originally covered in brightly coloured paint by their creators.

Check it out for yourself at the youtube link above.


Simon Tate: Auckland Council Libraries (2025)


Which brings me to my next point. What exactly are we intended to take away from this assemblage of artefacts? Once you've got over the security blanket feeling of seeing so many old friends among the books displayed in the vitrines - Philip K. Dick, William Gibson, Ursula K. Le Guin, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein - you begin to wonder about the rationale behind them.

Of course the standard themes are gestured towards: Robots and Monsters, Inner Worlds, the planet Mars ... these are a few of the labels included in the exhibition brochure. And, yes, artificial life and artificial intelligence are now subjects which impact on us everyday, as do the consequences of ignoring the ecological warnings of earlier SF.

“It’s a celebration of the imagination of writers and artists – of imaginative literature,” says Andrew Henry, Curator of Auckland Collections, Auckland Council Libraries.
“There’s a huge variety of other worlds that these writers have created, from outer space to cyberspace. We want to invite Aucklanders to come and check out science fiction’s early beginnings and how it’s progressed since then; to consider how this might be topical in the modern day and what some of the wildest predictions of technology have been – did they get it right? Come find out!”
Quite so. But in keeping with that invitation, I guess what excited me most about the show were the few, subversive signs it contained of a new lease of life for this now venerable genre.


Gina Cole: Na Viro (2022)


It's not actually included in any of the vitrines, but I see that local author Gina Cole has been asked to come and speak about her work at one of the public programmes associated with the exhibition. When I first read her novel Na Viro a few years ago, I was hugely impressed by the skill with which it integrated both colonial and dystopian themes into a new construct she referred to as "Pasifikafuturism."



Building on her earlier collection Black Ice Matter (2017), Cole has expertly transposed some of the ideas behind the embattled concept of Afrofuturism to a Pacific context.

But it's the inclusion of works by Octavia Butler and that supreme maverick Samuel R. Delany in the cabinet marked "Colonisation" that gives us a possible lead towards seeing how these themes ought to stand front and centre in any consideration of the meaning of SF in Aotearoa now.



While neither of these authors felt exactly comfortable about the possible limiting implications of the term, there's no doubt that present-day Afrofuturism - and its offshoot, Africanfuturism - owe a great debt to their pioneering work in the SF genre. Nor did they shy away from controversy or cultural politics: the lifeblood of any engaged artform.

I'd like to see what's included here, then, as not so much a nostalgia-fest as a blueprint for further progress. Where do we go from here? For Gina Cole, that has meant conceiving of travel through space as the same leap into the unknown her ancestors undertook in setting out across the moana.

Or, as T. S. Eliot once said:
... the future is a faded song, a Royal Rose or a lavender spray
Of wistful regret for those who are not yet here to regret,
Pressed between yellow leaves of a book that has never been opened.
And the way up is the way down, the way forward is the way back
.

- "The Dry Salvages." Four Quartets (1941)

Geoff Murphy, dir. The Quiet Earth (1985)





For those interested in pursuing this topic, there are a number of sites you might like to check out:



Other Worlds, curated by Andrew Henry & Renee Orr (2025)
[Mike Hinge: Analog cover design (1967)]


Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Poetry First Editions (Penguin Classics)



Mexican-born poet, publisher, and pundit Michael Schmidt is a formidable presence in the world of letters. Founder (in 1969) of Carcanet Press, he's championed the work of many neglected or unfashionable figures, from John Clare and Robert Graves to Sylvia Townsend Warner and Ivor Gurney.


The Book Binder's Daughter: A Carcanet Press Collection (2020)


I've already written a piece extolling Schmidt's extravagantly learned The Novel: A Biography (2014). But this is just one of the massive tomes he's written. They include:
  1. Lives of the Poets (1998)
  2. The Story of Poetry. 3 vols (2001-2006):
    1. From Cædmon to Caxton
    2. From Skelton to Dryden
    3. From Pope to Burns
  3. The First Poets: Lives of the Ancient Greek Poets (2004)
  4. The Novel: A Biography (2014)

Michael Schmidt (1947- )


This particular post, however, is about a little side-venture of his: the Penguin Classics "Poetry First Editions". So far as I can tell, this series lasted only a year or so. Which is to say that all of the eight titles I've been able to find details of seem to have been published in 1999, at the turn of the millennium. They were presumably collected in a boxset sometime after that.

So why do I assume that Schmidt was behind this enterprise? I guess because he contributed "notes on the text" to both of the books in this series I own myself - Robert Burns and John Keats - as well (it would appear) to the other six.


  1. [1786] Robert Burns: Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect
  2. [1798] William Wordsworth & Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Lyrical Ballads
  3. [1814] Lord Byron: The Corsair
  4. [1820] John Keats: Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes &c.
  5. [1896] A. E. Housman: A Shropshire Lad
  6. [1915] Rupert Brooke: 1914 and Other Poems
  7. [1923] D. H. Lawrence: Birds, Beasts and Flowers
  8. [1928] W. B. Yeats: The Tower



What's the first thing that strikes you when you look at this list? It's certainly eclectic and wide-ranging, but isn't it just a little surprising that all of authors on display are old, dead, white guys?

Old and dead, yes, that could be explained away by the nature of what was (presumably) meant to be a largely historical project: resurrecting important individual books of poems from the works of well-known poets we tend to encounter only in anthologies or in collected editions.

But white? Well, if you look at the list again, and try to deduce its approximate parameters, it would appear to be confined to poets from the British Isles. There are no Americans, no colonials, no poets writing in languages other than English (unless you count Burns). Finding a non-white poet to include might have risked sounding like tokenism, given the racial - and class - stranglehold on higher education (and publishing) characteristic of the British literary tradition until, at the very least, the mid-twentieth century.

The absence of any women poets demands a bit more explanation, though.


Henry Lamb: Sir Arthur Quiller Couch (1863-1944)


Back in the late nineteenth century, when he was putting together his classic Oxford Book of English Verse, Sir Arthur Quiller Couch seems to have had little difficulty in arriving at a satisfactory definition of just what he meant by poetry:
The best is the best, though a hundred judges have declared it so; nor had it been any feat to search out and insert the second-rate merely because it happened to be recondite.

Sir Arthur Quiller Couch, ed.: The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1918 (1939)


Forty years later, when he attempted to update his work, he must have felt a bit more pressure to justify the nature of his choices:
Of experiment I still hold myself fairly competent to judge. But, writing in 1939, I am at a loss what to do with a fashion of morose disparagement; of sneering at things long by catholic consent accounted beautiful; of scorning at ‘Man’s unconquerable mind’ and hanging up (without benefit of laundry) our common humanity as a rag on a clothes-line. Be it allowed that these present times are dark. Yet what are our poets of use — what are they for — if they cannot hearten the crew with auspices of daylight?
God knows what the old man thought of Auden and the other Macspaunday poets as they extolled communism and tried vainly to bring an end to "the old gang":
The hard bitch and the riding-master,
Stiff underground; deep in clear lake
The lolling bridegroom, beautiful, there.
No, so far as Q was concerned:
The reader, turning the pages of this book, will find this note of valiancy — of the old Roman ‘virtue’ mated with cheerfulness — dominant throughout, if in many curious moods. He may trace it back, if he care, far behind Chaucer to the rudest beginnings of English Song. It is indigenous, proper to our native spirit, and it will endure.

Louis Edouard Fournier: The Funeral of Shelley (1889)


If you reexamine the list of Poetry First Editions above, it's pretty clear that it's largely confined to the Romantic tradition in English verse. There are no Augustan satirists, no Modernists, no problem poets of any kind. The tradition this list embodies would have been perfectly acceptable to Q and other turn-of-the-century conservatives, determined to stick to the well-made lyric and eschew any other approach to writing verse. No Basil Bunting, T. S. Eliot, T. E. Hulme, Ezra Pound - not even Wilfred Owen or Isaac Rosenberg need apply.

And yet, if you turn back the clock 50 years, to 1975 (rather than 25, to the 1999 Penguin list) you'll find the following 'Poetry Reprint Series' of facsimile reprints of influential first slim volumes of verse published jointly by St James Press in London and St Martin's Press in New York:


Books I own are marked in bold:
  1. [1916] Robert Graves: Over the Brazier
  2. [1916] H.D.: Sea Garden
  3. [1923] Wallace Stevens: Harmonium
  4. [1931] John Betjeman: Mount Zion
  5. [1914] Conrad Aiken: Earth Triumphant




Robert Graves: Over the Brazier (1916)

Robert Graves:
Over the Brazier (1916)

Robert Graves. Over the Brazier. 1916. Poetry Reprint Series, 1. London: St. James Press / New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1975.


Robert Graves (1895-1985)





H.D.: Sea Garden (1916)

H.D. [Hilda Doolittle]:
Sea Garden (1916)

H.D. Sea Garden. 1916. Poetry Reprint Series, 2. London: St. James Press / New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1975.


Man Ray: H.D. (1896-1961)





Wallace Stevens: Harmonium (1923)

Wallace Stevens:
Harmonium (1923)

Wallace Stevens. Harmonium. 1923. Poetry Reprint Series, 3. London: St. James Press / New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1975.


Wallace Stevens (1879-1955)





John Betjeman: Mount Zion (1931)

John Betjeman:
Mount Zion (1931)

John Betjeman. Mount Zion; or, In Touch with the Infinite. Illustrated by de Cronin Hastings et al. 1931. Poetry Reprint Series, 4. London: St. James Press / New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1975.


John Betjeman (1906-1984)





Conrad Aiken: Earth Triumphant (1914)

Conrad Aiken:
Earth Triumphant (1914)

Conrad Aiken. Earth Triumphant and Other Tales in Verse. 1914. Poetry Reprint Series, 5. London: St. James Press / New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1975.


Conrad Aiken (1889-1973)






How exciting that "Poetry Reprint Series" still looks today! The ratio of Americans to Brits is, admittedly, 3 to 2, and all the books are from the twentieth century, but at least they've included H.D.'s marvellous first volume alongside all the blokes. Nor do they seem to be averse to experimental or even humorous poetry.

Was the idea, then, with the later 1999 'Poetry First Editions' series, to stick solely to exceptionally bestselling and/or influential volumes of verse? Keats's third book may well have been the latter, but it certainly wasn't the former. It sold as badly as the first two - until the news of his early death came out, that is. Rupert Brooke's book, by contrast, sold by the truckload, both before and after his own death. Why, then, the need to resurrect it now?

If, too, the dates can range over a century and a half, from 1786 to 1928, then why wasn't Emily Brontë included? Why no Christina Rossetti? Why not Elizabeth Barrett Browning's famous (or, if you prefer, infamous) Sonnets from the Portuguese?

W. E. Henley's free verse poems from the 1870s, eventually collected as In Hospital (1903), would surely offer a salutary alternative to the flood of over-ornate verbiage characteristic of the High Victorian age. And if the intention was to cast back to the late eighteenth century, why not open your list with William Blake's Poetical Sketches (1783), as a companion piece to Burns?

Talking of other inclusions alongside Burns, how about one of John Clare's books? Perhaps Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820), or The Rural Muse (1835).

None of these - it should be stressed - are meant as radical or revisionist suggestions. If the original objective of the series was to revisit influential mainstream poetry books which have left their mark on British writing in general, it does seem absurd that this opening salvo should have been so sedulously limited to the pale, stale and male.

Perhaps, in the end, that's why they decided not to persevere with the series. It's a shame, though, because these books are - in themselves - both beautiful and useful. I'm sorry that, as in the case of those 1975 "Poetry First Editions" books, there was no set 2 to straighten up the balance a bit.

I've included my own suggested list of supplementary or alternative inclusions directly below the original Penguin list below:


  1. [1786] Robert Burns (1759-1796): Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect
  2. [1798] Wordsworth (1770-1850) & Coleridge (1772-1834): Lyrical Ballads
  3. [1814] Lord Byron (1788-1824): The Corsair
  4. [1820] John Keats (1795-1821): Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes &c.
  5. [1896] A. E. Housman (1859-1936): A Shropshire Lad
  6. [1915] Rupert Brooke (1887-1915): 1914 and Other Poems
  7. [1923] D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930): Birds, Beasts and Flowers
  8. [1928] W. B. Yeats (1865-1939): The Tower




Robert Burns: Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1999)

Robert Burns:
Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1786)

Robert Burns. Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect. 1786. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. London: Penguin, 1999.
  • Robert Burns. The Kilmarnock Poems [Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, 1786]. Ed. Donald A. Low. Everyman's Library. London: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd., 1985..


Robert Burns (1759-1796)



William Wordsworth & Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Lyrical Ballads. 1798. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • William Wordsworth & Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Lyrical Ballads 1805. 1798. Ed. Derek Roper. 1968. Collins Annotated Student Texts. London: Collins Publishers, 1973.


Peter Vandyke: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)



Benjamin Robert Haydon: William Wordsworth (1770-1850)





Lord Byron: The Corsair (1814)

George Gordon, Lord Byron:
The Corsair (1814)

Lord Byron. The Corsair. 1814. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • The Poetical Works of Lord Byron. Ed. Frederick Page. 1904. Rev. ed. 1945. Oxford Standard Authors. London: Oxford University Press, 1959.


Thomas Phillips: Lord Byron (1788-1824)





John Keats: Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes (1820)

John Keats:
Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes and Other Poems (1820)

John Keats. Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes and Other Poems. 1820. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • Jack Stillinger, ed. The Poems of John Keats. The Definitive Edition. London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd., 1978.


Joseph Severn: John Keats (1795-1821)





A. E. Housman: A Shropshire Lad (1896)

Alfred Edward Housman:
A Shropshire Lad (1896)

A. E. Housman. A Shropshire Lad. 1896. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • A. E. Housman. A Shropshire Lad. 1896. London: Grant Richards Ltd., 1923.


A. E. Housman (1859-1936)





Rupert Brooke: 1914 and Other Poems (1915)

Rupert Brooke:
1914 and Other Poems (1915)

Rupert Brooke. 1914 and Other Poems. 1915. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • Rupert Brooke. 1914 and Other Poems. 1915. London: Faber, 1941.


Sherril Schell: Rupert Brooke (1887-1915)





D. H. Lawrence: Birds, Beasts, and Flowers (1923)

David Herbert Lawrence:
Birds, Beasts, and Flowers (1923)

D. H. Lawrence. Birds, Beasts and Flowers. 1923. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • The Collected Poems of D. H. Lawrence. Vol. 2: Unrhyming Poems. 2 vols. London: Martin Secker, 1928.


D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930)





W. B. Yeats: The Tower (1928)

William Butler Yeats:
The Tower (1928)

W. B. Yeats. The Tower. 1928. Note on the Text by Michael Schmidt. Poetry First Editions. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1999.
  • The Variorum Edition of the Poems of W. B. Yeats. Ed. Peter Allt & Russell K. Alspach. 1957. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1973.


W. B. Yeats (1865-1939)





And here's my own (doubtless very subjective) counter-list:


  1. [1783] William Blake (1757-1827): Poetical Sketches
  2. [1820] John Clare (1793-1864): Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery
  3. [1846] Emily Brontë (1818-1848): Poems by Currer, Ellis & Acton Bell
  4. [1850] Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861): Sonnets from the Portuguese
  5. [1850] Christina Rossetti (1830-1894): Goblin Market and Other Poems
  6. [1903] W. E. Henley (1849-1903): In Hospital
  7. [1918] G. M. Hopkins (1844-1889): Poems
  8. [1920] Wilfred Owen (1893-1918): Poems
  9. [1932] W. H. Auden (1907-1973): The Orators




William Blake: Poetical Sketches (1783)

William Blake:
Poetical Sketches (1783)

William Blake. Poetical Sketches (1783)
  • Poetry and Prose of William Blake: Complete in One Volume. Ed. Geoffrey Keynes. The Centenary Edition. 1927. London: the Nonesuch Press / New York: Random House, 1948.


William Blake: William Blake (1807)





John Clare: Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820)

John Clare:
Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820)

John Clare. Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820)
  • The Poems of John Clare. Ed. J. W. Tibble. 2 vols. London: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd. / New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. Inc., 1935.


John Clare (1862)




Currer, Ellis & Acton Bell: Poems (1846)

Emily Jane Brontë:
Poems (1846)

Emily Brontë [as 'Ellis Bell]: Poems (1846)
  • Emily Jane Brontë. The Complete Poems. Ed. C. W. Hatfield. 1941. New York & London: Columbia University Press & Oxford University Press, 1963.


Branwell Brontë: Emily Brontë (1833)




Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Sonnets from the Portuguese (1906)

Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850)

Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850)
  • The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Oxford Complete Edition. London: Henry Frowde / Oxford University Press, 1908.


Michele Gordigiani: Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1858)




Christina Rossetti: Goblin Market and Other Poems (1862)

Christina Georgina Rossetti:
Goblin Market and Other Poems (1862)

Christina Rossetti. Goblin Market and Other Poems (1862)
  • The Poetical Works of Christina Georgina Rossetti. Ed. William Michael Rossetti. 1904. The Globe Edition. London: Macmillan and Co., Limited, 1924.
  • Christina Rossetti. The Complete Poems. Ed. R. W. Crump. 1979-90. Notes & Introduction by Betty S. Flowers. 2001. Penguin Classics. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 2005.
  • Christina Rossetti. Goblin Market. Illustrated by Arthur Rackham. London: Harrap Limited, 1984.


Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Christina Rossetti (1866)




W. E. Henley: In Hospital (1903)

William Ernest Henley:
In Hospital: Rhymes and Rhythms (1903)




Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Ed. Robert Bridges (1918)
  • Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Ed. Robert Bridges. 1918. Second Edition With an Appendix of Additional Notes, and a Critical Introduction by Charles Williams. 1930. The Oxford Bookshelf. 1937. London: Oxford University Press, 1941.
  • Gerard Manley Hopkins. The Poems: Fourth Edition, based on the First Edition of 1918 and enlarged to incorporate all known poems and fragments. Ed. W. H. Gardner & N. H. MacKenzie. 1967. London: Oxford University Press, 1970.





Wilfred Owen: Poems (1920)

Wilfred Owen:
Poems (1920)

Wilfred Owen. Poems. Ed. Siegfried Sassoon (1920)
  • The Poems of Wilfred Owen. Ed. with a Memoir and Notes by Edmund Blunden. 1931. London: Chatto & Windus Ltd., 1963.
  • The Collected Poems of Wilfred Owen. Ed. Cecil Day Lewis. 1963. Memoir by Edmund Blunden. 1931. A Chatto & Windus Paperback CWP 18. London: Chatto & Windus Ltd., 1977.
  • Wilfred Owen. The Complete Poems and Fragments. 2 vols. Ed. Jon Stallworthy. 1983. Rev. ed. Chatto & Windus. London: Random House, 2013.


Wilfred Owen (1920)




W. H. Auden: The Orators (1932)

Wystan Hugh Auden:
The Orators: An English Study (1932)

W. H. Auden. The Orators (1932)
  • W. H. Auden. The Orators: An English Study. 1932. London: Faber, 1966.
  • W. H. Auden. Poems. Volume I: 1927-1939. The Complete Works of W. H. Auden. Ed. Edward Mendelson. Princeton & Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2022.


W. H. Auden (1946)




So there you are! 8 + 5 + 9 = 22 wonderful books of poetry we'd all be a lot worse off without. I wish I had enough space here to write a treatise on each them: but luckily such information isn't hard to access nowadays.

If you haven't read at least a few of them, you really should. You won't regret it. I promise.