Our visit to the Katherine Mansfield House & Garden in Wellington New Zealand.

Katherine Mansfield

Today I  honour Katherine Mansfield — a New Zealand literary icon ( 1888-1923)
Her words shaped New Zealand’s literary voice on the world stage.

She is  living tribute to her brilliance and the her shared heritage.

She is best known for her Modernist short stories . 

She spent time living in Europe and mixed with many progressive and well known writers, artists. poets etc.

Her work was admired by fellow 20th century writers, including Virginia Woofe , D.H. Lawrence.,Thomas  Hardy, and Elizabeth Bowen.

Her journals and letters evoke a passionate individual, dedicated to her craft, whose life was tragically cut short by tuberculosis aged 34. 

On our Anniversary-holiday, where we cruised around the South Island of  New Zealand we had the exciting  opportunity to spend the time while berthed in the Capital Wellington, to revisit Katherine Mansfield House and Garden. We walked  with our given map to  25 Tinakori Rd, which was about 15 mins  from the Quay. (It took us half an hour, but we did wander and enjoy the journey.)

Unfortunately a motor way now races beneath the preserved house, but at the house and garden we forgot about the business and noise. where she was born and lived her early years. It has been preserved and beautifully restored. I felt the love and dedication given to this beauiful place. 

The house and garden gives us a glimpse into the home of a fashionable colonial family, what life was like for Mansfield  Katherine Mansfield as a young girl living in Wellington and the life and writing of a woman far away from her first home. 

The first view was of the garden, which was beautifully cared for and was connected with Katherine’s writing..

Michael and I after our walk and discovery of the  House & Garden.

My favourite sign as I love roses and there were many roses not in bloom at the moment

Inside the house we were amazed at the  detail and the ways it has been restored. An honour  

for Katherine that it is here and cared for lovingly.

  1. Dining room 2. Sitting room  3. A stunnin 4. A stunning period chair 5. Michael with the Grandfather clock.
  2. The last two bring back memories of the old days with the traymobile  and the fuel stove that my Nanna had.

 

One of my connections with here is my favourite story called The Doll’s House.

A short story that shows inequality and the hard reality of life where the children pull our heart strings so wistfully.

And here is the Dolls’ House that inspired the story.

Summary:   The story explores the theme of class distinction and cruelty in society.

It is set in rural New Zealand and based on Mansfield’s own experiences growing up.
The story follows the Burnell children receiving a doll’s house as a gift. While Kezia wants to show it to the poor Kelvey sisters,
her sister Isabel refuses due to their lower class. Later, Kezia secretly invites the sisters to see it, but they are dismissed.
The doll’s house and its lamp symbolize hope for overcoming social discrimination.
To read The Doll’s House  hopefully click below  or google as there is  a PDF of the story 8 min read.

https://susannahfullerton.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/THE-DOLLS-HOUSE.pdf

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I mention again the award-winning book, Virginia & Katherine: The Secret Diaries by my friend Pip Griffin (Pohutukawa Press 2022)

that was being sold at the Shop and now I discover it is sold out.

 

Some flowers in the Katherine Mansfield  Garden

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our talk on Mary Oliver for U3A Eastwood Poetry Appreciation

A summary of our talk for U3A  on Mary Oliver

Colleen & Michael Keating

“Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination”  Mary Oliver
I love reading and being inspired by Mary Oliver. Her language is  fresh and crisp:
simple and ordinary in a way
that wisdom is always simple. and ordinary.  Her imagery is rich and memorable.
 I think of her as a technician of the sacred. And she is one of my guides to the natural world.
And I keep discovering her imagery over and over 
I hope you enjoy getting to know her too.

Michael

*Mary Olive was Born September 10th 1935 in Ohio
*An American poet who has won the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
*The NY Times described her as “far and away America’s best-selling poet.”
*Her poetry turns towards nature for its inspiration and she describes the sense of wonder it instills  in her. eg 
“when its over I want to say, 
“all my life I was a bride
married to amazement.
I was a bridegroom 
taking the world into my arms.”    (When death comes)
When she left school in 1953  she wanted to get away from her oppressive family situation and on a whim
visited Steppletop the home of Edna  St Vincent Millay  which was a centre of writing and poetry.
and made friends with Millay’s sister Norma and Mary Oliver stayed there and helped over the next few years
to collate the papers of this late poet.
One day on a visit there she met the photographer Molly Malone Cook, they  fell in love  as she says:
  “I took one look and fell,
    hook and tumble”  
and set up home together, settling  in Provincetown in Massachusetts. That was in 1960 and her partner died after 40 years in 2005
and Mary Oliver continued to live there. and died on the 17th January 2019.  We have noted at lease 25 published books of poetry. 

Colleen

*Her poetry is grounded in memories of her early life in Ohio and her adopted home in Provincetown in New England. 
Most of the imagery in her poetry  is found in and around her home.
*She reminds me of Emily Dickinson both having an affinity for solitude and  an interior reflective 
voice and both inspired by their immediate surrounds. 
*A clear and poignant observer of the natural world . Her creativity is  stirred by nature and accessed through walking .
*She acknowledges strong influence from two early Nature poets Whitman and Thoreau
Her idols also included the Romantics Shelley and Keats. And as we will notice even in the first poem
she show reference to  Rilkie .
Sometimes I feel there is a Rumi influence too.  
*Her writings are filled with the imagery from her daily walks near her home.
shore birds, water snakes, grasshoppers, sunflowers ,phases of the moon,
dawn,  forests,  light .
She says:
“I go to my woods, my ponds, 
  my sun-filled harbour, 
no more then a blue comma 
on the map of the world 
but to me the emblem of everything”
*She has been called “a patroller of wetlands “ as Thoreau is called “an inspector of snow storms”
*She uses unadorned language and accessible themes

Michael

*A poet of Wisdom  e.g. on Pinterest there are pages of people who have been captured by her wisdom,
using lines from her poems to create posters and banners . A few years back  we found her  words
on grand posters all over the walls and poles of our local McDonalds restaurant.
I think because she grapples and identifies the essence of the matter and has the ability  to write simple succinct lines
and  her words are spare  she is accessible to the reader.

Colleen

*And what I love she can describe ecstasy while retaining a practical awareness of the world as one of predators and prey.
Being in the paradox of the agony and ecstasy

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Here are the poems we read and pondered together,  finding the collective wisdom of our great  U3A  Poetry Appreciation  Group

Invitation 

Peonies

When I am among the trees

The Summer Day

The Journey

Wild Geese

The Fish

The Poet With His Face In His Hands

How I go to the woods

When death comes 

Swan 

I Worried

Self–portrait

Can You Imagine

Sleeping in the Wood

That Little Beast