About Poety Matters

Poetry Matters is a home-grown print poetry journal that began in Spring 2006.

Censorship can take many forms. The inability to find a place of publication can be social censorship.


Poetry is freedom. Anyone can write poetry.


Nevertheless, it takes a lot of work to create the poetry that reaches the places only poetry knows.


Whoever you are, wherever you are,
Poetry Matters welcomes you as readers and writers.

Contact me about submissions and subscriptions: poetry.clh@gmail.com

10 July 2014

the therapeutic value of poetry

'I have a growing sense that through the long years of rehabilitation, it has been Jayne's poetry, her thoughts and words, which have revived and sustained us, reminding  us of her talents and skills, her promise, her capacity for humour and irony, her never-give-up attitude. No amount of ranging of limbs or other standard rehabilitation practices has come anywhere as near to bringing the new and the old Jayne together as her poetry has.'

Helen Sage, 2013, A flower between the cracks: A memoir of love, hope and disability, Affirm Press, South Melbourne.

08 July 2014

Poetry, politics and happiness

'Poetry has a political past. It is not just that the most subversive voices going back to the Roman poet Ovid, have been writers of verse. It is that, as Confucius said, the most important act of a ruler is clarifying words. 
     Confucious, like Aristotle, wanted to put his ideas for a better society into action by advising a king. He never got to do it, but when asked what his first decree would be should he ever gain influence, he declared: "Get the language right." Unless we know what we mean, we have no chance of forging happiness, he explained.

...

... the founder of modern China, Mao Zedong ... best known for declaring that "power comes out of the barrel of a gun". But he was also a poet and launched the Cultural Revolution which killed 20 million people, because he was attacked with words, not bullets. When a playwright parodied him in the 1960s, Mao knew the game was up, and so unleashed his murderous Red Guards. This is a long way from Aristotle, who believed that politics was not just an ethical business, but the highest form of philosophy.'

Peter Ellingsen, The Age, Melbourne.