C.K.STEAD, born in Auckland 1932, became known as one of the new
young poets of the 1950s and ’60s, and earned an international
reputation as a critic, particularly with The New Poetic, Yeats
to Eliot (1964). His first novel, Smith’s Dream
(1971), became the movie ‘Sleeping Dogs’ (Sam Neil’s
and Roger Donaldson’s first). Since the early 1980s, and particularly
since early retirement from his Professorship of English at the University
of Auckland, Stead has been known also as a novelist and short story
writer. Dog, from which ‘Gotland Midsummer’ is
taken, is his twelfth collection of poems.
Stead comments: ‘The poem appeared in Dog, my most
recent collection of poems, published by Auckland University Press
in 2002. It was a late addition to that collection, written after
I had visited the island of Gotland off the Swedish coast in the Baltic
sea. My grandfather was Swedish (I am named after him – Christian
Karlson) and I have Swedish writer friends, among them Lars Ardelius
mentioned in the poem. Every summer a group of Swedish writers, artists
and film makers holiday in the south of Gotland and there has been
a tradition that they make and perform a play in the theatre-barn
Lars has constructed. There is no “paying public”, no
reviewers, no script is kept – it just flowers and vanishes.
I thought that fact, and the barn, was like the summer in Gotland
– which has an atmosphere reminsicent of Ingmar Bergman films.
(Bergman holidays on the island, and Kay and I had lunch one day with
Lars and Carin Ardelius and Bergman’s daughter and her husband.)’