Robert Adamson鈥檚 final book is a search for recognition and a poetic tribute to his love of nature
笔丑辞迟辞:听,听
Craig Billingham,
For poet Robert Adamson, the natural world offered a form of deliverance.
, one of our greatest poets, died aged 79 on December 16, 2022. By that time, as recorded in the biographical note in his final book, , he had published 21 volumes of poetry and had long been a renowned editor, critic and publisher. He made a significant and lasting contribution to Australian literature.
Birds and Fish: Life on the Hawkesbury 鈥 Robert Adamson (Upswell)
In 2004, Adamson published . Several long excerpts are included in Birds and Fish, a selection of his writings on the natural world. The first of these excerpts begins:
From as far back as I can remember, I was fascinated by animals and felt compelled to get close to them in whatever way I could 鈥 by hunting them, studying them, keeping them in cages or imitating their behaviour.
Adamson grew up in Neutral Bay on Sydney鈥檚 lower north shore, which afforded him ample opportunity to pursue his interest. He frequented Taronga Zoo, 鈥渟ometimes through the front gates, but more often over the fence near [his] favourite part, the quarantine area at Athol Bay鈥.
On one such occasion, aged 鈥渢en or eleven鈥, Adamson fell into an enclosure and found himself 鈥渇ace to face with an angry cassowary鈥. He stood 鈥渦tterly still with the great black bird鈥 circling around him, with its 鈥渄eep, resonant, furious-sounding voice鈥 and 鈥渉orn of a head fringed with iridescent blue feathers shivering in the moonlight鈥.
It is a terrifying, beautiful scene, recounted not by the fallen boy, of course, but the poet he became.
Australian Cassowary (Casuarius australis): illustration by Elizabeth Gould for John Gould鈥檚 Birds of Australia.,
Adamson says of the injured rainbow lorikeets his younger self would take home to nurse that
I wanted to will myself inside the bird鈥檚 head 鈥 not to tame it exactly. What I think I was aiming for when I stared into each bird鈥檚 eyes was some flicker of recognition, some sign of connection between us. I wanted the bird to recognise and accept me. But as what?
Adamson is very often on philosophical ground. What does it mean for a person to want an animal 鈥渢o recognise and accept鈥 him? Do animals have such a capacity? Can an animal be a person?
Theories of recognition have a long history, which in the Western tradition date back at least as far as Hegel. To think on 鈥渞ecognition鈥 raises questions of respect and understanding, friendship, love and empathy, and law.
To and from whom is recognition given, or withheld? As we know from history, and it seems always newly apparent, the answer to such a question can be a hinge point for calamity.
In the scene with the injured lorikeet, as earlier with the angry cassowary, the philosophy is implicit. We knew it would be, for the book鈥檚 epigraph is from : 鈥淲hat you look hard at seems to look hard at you.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 only non-human animals to whom the young Adamson looked for recognition:
The year I turned ten was my best year, when I was class captain for the final term. This was the year of Mr Roberts, the teacher who introduced me to poetry and what they called nature studies.
Mr Roberts 鈥渨ould read poems to the class and go through them explaining what they meant and how poetry worked.鈥
The young Adamson seemed to find therein 鈥渁 secret code鈥. He excelled at memorising poems, a talent which saw him selected to represent his school 鈥渙n an ABC radio program that came on just before The Argonauts every Friday afternoon鈥.
It helped, too, that Mr Roberts 鈥渒new a bit about birds鈥 and that he was encouraging about projects and assignments. The young Adamson lights up, a recognition undimmed, even when a new teacher tells him 鈥渢o forget [his] ambition鈥.
He has a strong sense already that the natural world is 鈥減ure compared to the hypocrisies of humans鈥:
There was no third party, no good manners, no god involved 鈥 no reasoning or theology, let alone spelling and maths. Nature was blunt and honest.
For Adamson, the natural world offers a form of deliverance:
Fishing sustains the soul because it was once one of the most natural things a human being could do; that is why you can enter that state of grace, that lightness of being, while fishing. It is to do with the field of being; you can project yourself back to the original lores, rites and rituals.
All of which carries us from Hegel and recognition to the Spinoza Journal, which takes up the last 30 pages of the book. Adamson writes:
Spinoza鈥檚 given name [Baruch] means 鈥淏lessed鈥 in Hebrew. Spinoza argued that God exists and is abstract and impersonal. His view of God can be described as Classical Pantheism, with infinite manifestations of divinity.
The Spinoza of Adamson鈥檚 journal is not the , but an unfledged bird that Adamson and his wife, the photographer Juno Gemes, find on the side of the road close to their house on the Hawkesbury River.
Adamson realises that the chick is only a few days old. He carries her 鈥渋nto the garage鈥 and sets 鈥渉er on the makeshift nest鈥. Every two hours, he feeds her a 鈥渕ixture of rolled oats, crushed walnut and egg yolk鈥. A lifetime鈥檚 acquaintance with birds informs his actions:
When you find a baby bird, the thing to do is to place it near the tree it may have fallen from and wait for the parents to turn up. I did this and watched from a distance. It was a hot afternoon, so after about an hour, I decided that was long enough. I looked around for likely foster parents 鈥 currawongs, magpies and maybe kookaburras? No action at all. I took the baby bird back inside and put it into the cat carrier. To my relief, next morning the chick was still alive and squawking for food.
Adamson worries at the domestication of a channel-billed cuckoo, fearing 鈥淪pin the domestic companion would be like having Arthur Rimbaud as a pet鈥. He looks hard at the bird and the bird looks right back. There are regular feeding times and flying lessons, affording Adamson an occasion to write about Pliny the Elder and Charles Darwin, and to recall the 鈥淐uckoo Song鈥, the 鈥渙ldest secular lyric written in English, dating from 1250鈥.
There is some terrific writing and detailed observation. Then, some six weeks into the relationship:
I鈥檓 feeling embarrassed today: I finally realised Spin is not a channel-billed cuckoo. Spinoza is a satin bowerbird!
Spin has been misidentified, but not unrecognised:
Spin was in a lovely mood today in my study. I was working on the manuscript for my new book. As I look into Spin鈥檚 eye, when he turns his head to one side, I sense an empathy between us.
We should be thankful to Upswell Publishing and the editor of Birds and Fish, the American poet , for ensuring the publication of this last of Adamson鈥檚 books.
The sort of recognition it suggests is a capacity of the imagination, or the moral imagination. It is imperfect, 鈥渂lunt and honest鈥, and perhaps in a final sense, hopeful. Adamson deserves the last word:
Although I have loved birds all my life and love Spin deeply, it is Spin who has taught me that birds are nothing at all like humans. They are far removed from us, really, except that sometimes they let us project ourselves onto what we imagine them to be.
, Lecturer, Creative Writing,
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