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A
Public
Memory Project
by
Chris Lee
About
History
Places
Writers
Alice
Guèrin Crist
Dorothy
Cottrell
Margaret
Curran
Bruce
Dawe
George
Essex Evans
Jean
Kent

David
Rowbotham
Steele
Rudd
A.
G. Stephens
Margaret
Trist
Jillian
Watkinson
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Writers
Next morning, through a screen of wine-coloured Japanese plum trees, I stepped on the edge of the Range. Eight hundred feet below me the mists were just breaking up from the purple valley floor; shreds of finely ascending gold and tenderest pink, quivering stirring banks of silver, parting to reveal deep blue and purple of fathomless shadow; ruby touching the peaked wall of the northern mountains; and to the east the hill waves running on and on to meet the sun. ‘The Singing Gold,’ Dorothy Cottrell
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Jean
Kent
(1951- )
Jean
Kent was born at Chinchilla on 30 August 1951 and was educated at
the Glennie Memorial School in Toowoomba in the mid to late sixties
where she started filling exercise books with poems under the spell
of Dylan Thomas.
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This is
the country
Where feelings stay unspoken.
In the home paddock of the head,
Harvesting is private. Between the ripening
Thoughts and the reality of speech,
there is always this silence
this space between warzones
bordering us as the verandah
boards the deep space
between the heart of the house
and the world.
'Verandah
Poems: Under a Roof of Rippled Tin,' Jean Kent.
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She
spent her youth in and around the Darling Downs and began publishing
her writing while taking a degree in psychology at the University
of Queensland. She has worked as a counselor and now lives on the
New South Wales north coast, which is a feature in her verse, as well
the memories and experiences formed in youth and childhood in South
East Queensland. |
Down the
length of this country like a zip
Connecting inland to coast, mountains lie-
And we are locked in the neat teeth, in this city
Going nowhere, fast. As the morning rises I walk,
weighted, through my dreams of leaving. White fog
slowly unwraps.
'In a Provincial
City, Cycling to School,' Jean Kent.
In
1989 she wrote:
'Most
of my poems seem to be about very ordinary things. I believe anything
related to our humanness can become a poem
Of course I do like to
take words for a walk
I'm always searching for a word which will
let a phrase off the leash or set an image free. Perhaps because I grew
up in rural Queensland, nature keeps recurring as part of my view. I like
to use physical details to bring out emotional resonances, but also for
their own impact. Something as ordinary as an ironingboard can be breathtaking
if it's rediscovered. Amusing, too.' [i]
| Kent
has published stories in many of Australia's quality literary magazines
such as Overland, Westerly, Outrider, Imago,
Australian Short Stories and Meanjin as well as in the
American based Antiopodes. The verse has also appeared in numerous
magazines and collected into three books: Verandahs (1990),
Practising Breathing (1991); The Satin Bowerbird (1998)
and The and the Wagtail pamphlet The Spaghetti Maker: And Other
Poems (2002). |
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(How far
can you see? How far?)
But always
the same smalltown reply:
I can
see Toowoomba. I can see the Range. And here
on the other side of the creek in 1963
Old Jack behind a draughthorse
is ploughing a paddock
for potatoes.
'From the
Bottom of the Range, The View,' Jean Kent.
| She
has won numerous awards including the Josephine Ulrick National Poetry
Prize (1999), Wesley Michel Wright Prize for Poetry (1998), the Association
for the Study of Australian Literature's Mary Gilmore Award (1991),
FAW Anne Elder Poetry Award (1990), Henry Kendall Poetry Competition
(1988 and 1989) and the National Library Poetry Competition (1988). |
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Beyond
a window, its bottom tier hitched
Like a skirt at a beach, this verandah waits.
Pretending no absence, resting on this reef,
Will I find at last my life floating out
Like a dream just this side of sleeping?
Here between the house and the world:
A space, stripped, open to air
A room, rippled above and below
A home like a safe, dry hollow in the heart
Of an ocean.
'A Dream
of Refuge,' Jean Kent.
Further Reading
[i] Jean Kent, 'Statements : Jean Kent.'
Poetry and Gender: Statements and Essays in Australian Women's Poetry
and Poetics, Eds. David Brooks and Brenda Walker, St Lucia: UQP, 1989,
pp. 48-50.
Barbara Bursill, 'At the Centre of My Life: An Interview with Jean Kent,'
Imago: New Writing 11.1 (1999): 63-79.
Please use
the link list on the left to access various featured writers Biographies
and Portraits.
Submissions
and suggestions for writers not yet included can be sent to leec@usq.edu.au
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