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Singing Light and the Beckoning Brindabellas

by
February 2005, no. 268

Unfinished Journey: Collected Poems 1932-2004 by Michael Thwaites

Ginninderra Press, $25pb, 174pp

Singing Light and the Beckoning Brindabellas

by
February 2005, no. 268

Gentleman also write poems. Michael Thwaites, winner of the King’s Medal for poetry back in 1940, is resolutely old school: set subjects, square metrics, good manners. He is a quiet achiever. Even his voice is quiet, though not so quiet that you can’t hear it. Solid statements, with a minimum of flourish or divertimenti, are his rule.

Unfinished Journey: Collected Poems 1932–2004 is divided into five chronological sections, so you can follow the story of a life lived. ‘Milton Blind’, an earnest construction, wins the Newdigate Prize for 1938. There is his wartime classic, ‘The Jervis Bay’, the narration of a 1940 sea battle in the North Atlantic, which borrows from British imperial action verse while interleaving Murrayesque graphics:

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