Occasionally someone will ask me, rather disdainfully, ‘What’s the point in writing poems about animals or nature? Surely there are more important things than that?’. Those ‘more important things’ are invariably human concerns such as injustice, poverty or crime. And yes, they are important, unarguably so.
But the implication seems to be that unless we address such topics openly, nakedly, loudly, all other poetry is somehow shallow and inconsequential.
I disagree.
The best poetry deals with what it means to be human. Our societies, cultures, attitudes and beliefs both mould us and are moulded by us. But we are also a fragment of something larger – the natural environment. If we allow ourselves to, we can learn a great deal about ourselves from this environment.
As invariably with the best poetry, words are used to imply and suggest rather than to state categorically. Such poems may be based on powerful feelings, but rather than lecture about rights and wrongs they encourage us to consider where (and how) we fit into things. Although many people equate ‘nature poetry’ with a lightweight, Hallmark-cards doggerel, there is nothing twee or saccharine about real poems.
Here are some that invite us to contemplate in this way. I would argue that their animal or nature themes help us explore some deeply important human matters.
Grahamstown poet Andrew Martin, for instance, reminds us that a beached whale and human suffering are not so very different when seen from a world where “hope is / just a word”:
Outcast
if we were to look
we would see them
bodies forced outstream
memorials to an unseen scourge –
a whale on a beach
a destitute widow
a small, sickly child
a man without pride
left searching for the end
away from
that place
where
hope is
just a word
you too
were forced outstream
because you saw them
Andrew Martin
(from For Rhino in a Shrinking World, Poets Printery, 2013)
Alaskan poet Emily Wall’s work is certainly whimsical, but it also asks something of us: what do we do with our lives that a dog or a cat might urge us to do differently?
This is not a poem about dogs
This is also not a poem about cats,
with their terrible grace,
and the way they make any woman ungainly.
This is not a poem about
babies and their hungry mouths, mewling
through the night.
This is not a poem about
books, the fresh glue smell and uncracked
spine of an unread novel.
If this were a poem about these things,
it would be a poem full of wishes,
and heartaches.
It would be a poem about the way
a dog looks, running along the hard-packed
sand of an Alaskan beach, April, long sun setting,
herding a flock of sandpipers and gulls –
symbolising the old things
we all want –
joy, grace, spirit.
If this poem were about that dog,
it would be a poem of such longing,
and such regret.
And who has the time, anyway,
for such indulgences?
Emily Wall
(from Dogs Singing, Salmon Poetry, 2010)
And so, we’re left with DH Lawrence’s pithy observation of a reptile – or is it of us?
Lizard
A lizard ran out on a rock and looked up, listening
no doubt to the sounding of the spheres.
And what a dandy fellow! the right toss of a chin for you
and swirl of a tail!
If men were as much men as lizards are lizards
they’d be worth looking at.
DH Lawrence
(from The Rattle Bag, Faber & Faber, 1982)