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How poet Martin Harrison found beauty in the mundane, creating ‘profoundly riveting’ works that changed a Hong Kong poet-professor’s life

  • Martin Harrison was renowned for his poetry’s highly perceptive metaphysical observations of natural phenomena and detailed focus on the nature of selfhood
  • Hong Kong poet Belle Ling explains how his 2001 collection Summer left her ‘awestruck’ and opened up possibilities for her to think about her own poems

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Hong Kong poet Belle Ling, who is also an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong, says Martin Harrison’s “Summer” is “an adventurous and bold exploration of the quotidian”. Photo: Bella Ling

Anglo-Australian poet, journalist, radio producer and academic Martin Harrison was renowned both for his poetry’s highly perceptive, metaphysical observations of natural phenomena and for its detailed focus on the nature of selfhood; “Summer” (2001) is one of his best known collections and a critical favourite.

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Award-winning Hong Kong poet Belle Ling, who is also an assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong, tells Richard Lord how it changed her life.

I first met Martin Harrison during my master’s studies at the University of Sydney in 2008. Back then, I was a newbie in creative writing. I was still searching for my voice – and still am – with my creative vision evolving.

I was exploring different literary genres, such as fiction, children’s literature, poetry, screenwriting and creative non-fiction. Martin was my teacher in the poetry workshop. He would walk into the classroom limping. He had a very humble and down-to-earth demeanour.

The cover of Martin Harrison’s 2001 book of poetry, “Summer”.
The cover of Martin Harrison’s 2001 book of poetry, “Summer”.

Martin introduced us to what poetry meant to him. He had a unique magnanimity towards theories and philosophies. He would talk about how poetry is often about our pre-linguistic sense of the world – that is, how poetic language touches upon human intuition and the impulsive sensitivities of the body before our mind nails down any meaning.

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It was the first time that poetry, I found, could be related to more than merely language; or even that language could be so porous, so visceral. I recently reread Martin’s poems, which are still, to me, profoundly riveting.

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