ELIZABETH SMITHER has published 16 collections of poetry, including
the prize-winning A pattern of marching (Auckland University
Press, 1989) winner of the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry, 1990,
and The Lark Quartet (Auckland University Press, 1999) winner
of the Montana New Zealand Book Award for Poetry, 2000.
She is the third and first woman Te Mata Poet Laureate and Red
Shoes (Godwit, 2003) is the result of her two-year term (2001-2003).
A Question of Gravity: selected poems, edited by John Kinsella,
will be published by Arc Publications (UK) in 2004.
Smither comments: ‘Mai Nguen, a beautiful young Vietnamese woman,
died tragically of lung cancer. A local priest, Father Tom, asked me
to take communion to her during her last months and I agreed, with trepidation.
I knew Mai slightly as she had worked as a library shelver: at her funeral
it became clear she was an adored teacher in Vietnam who, during Teacher’s
Day, received more gifts than anyone else from her pupils. With Mai’s
help I bungled and improvised my way through an increasingly shorter
version of the Eucharist. From her I learnt the courage, when faced
with an extreme situation, to be bold and loving. It was easy to wrap
my arms around her or simply hold her hand. At her vigil prayers I stood
beside her coffin and looked down on her serene face: she was dressed
in a beautiful red and gold silk dress. And at the funeral, as if we
did not wish to see her go, there was a significant pause before the
procession moved off. In the poem I wanted to take that movement further,
into the weeks and months that followed, and to imagine Mai, not lost,
but in a more expansive beauty.’
Poem: To Mai, a month after her death
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