Southmost Twelve (1962) is the fifth poetry collection by Australian poet Robert D. Fitzgerald. It won the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1962.[1]

Southmost Twelve
First edition
AuthorRobert D. Fitzgerald
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Genrepoetry collection
PublisherAngus and Robertson
Publication date
1962
Media typePrint
Pages60 pp
Preceded byThis Night's Orbit : Verses 
Followed byRobert D. Fitzgerald 

The collection consists of 32 poems, all except three of which were previously published in various Australian poetry and general magazines. Its major poem is "The Wind at Your Door" which had only been published previously as a limited edition volume in 1959.[1]

Contents edit

  • "What Coin Soever"
  • "Edge"
  • "Southmost Twelve"
  • "The Waterfall"
  • "Verities"
  • "Grace Before Meat"
  • "One Day's Journey"
  • "Song in Autumn"
  • "Drift"
  • "Bog and Candle"
  • "Insight : Creak of the Crow"
  • "Insight : The Dunce's Cap"
  • "Insight : Wings Above Wings"
  • "Insight : In the Street"
  • "Insight : Vision"
  • "Insight : Memorial Arch"
  • "Strata"
  • "Macquarie Place"
  • "Quayside Meditation"
  • "Tocsin"
  • "Protest"
  • "This Between Us..."
  • "Relic at Strength-Fled"
  • "Embarkation"
  • "Caprice"
  • "As Between Neighbours..."
  • "Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of One Thing and Another"
  • "Album Verse (To J. K. F. G.)"
  • "Laus Deo"
  • "The Wind at Your Door"
  • "Beginnings"
  • "Acknowledgement to Norman Lindsay"

Critical reception edit

Ronald McCuaig in The Bulletin noted "The masterpiece of Fitzgerald's book is 'The Wind at Your Door', for those who like what you might call representational poetry the finest poem he has written. In the meditative and metaphysical pieces and suites which precede it he is as good as ever he was; there is the same sharp acquisitive eye for image."[2]

In his review of the poetry collection in The Sydney Morning Herald Gustav Cross opined: "Directness, lucidity and a beautifully exact dramatic or logical construction mean much more to Mr Fitzgerald than richness of verbal texture. As in 'The Wind at Your Door,' the poet is most concerned to find a pattern of meaning underlying the chaos and senseless violence around us."[3]

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Austlit - Southmost Twelve by Robert D. Fitzgerald
  2. ^ "Poets taken by surprise" by Ronald McCuaig, The Bulletin, 19 January 1963, p36
  3. ^ "Australian Poetry" by Gustav Cross, The Sydney Morning Herald, 2 February 1963, p16