BOOK REVIEW
Found poetry

A 12-year-old girl is playing the violin. The poet asks if she hears the tunes in her head. “No”, she replies,
“My fingers know the way, and I follow them”. It’s a measure of how much meaning Richard Bronson’s
poems can sustain that this glorious, insouciant piece of “found poetry” (the girl presumably said just
this) reads as a brief image of the link between body and mind, the physical and the inspirational.

Bronson is an endocrinologist, and this is his first collection of poetry. Some of his work draws directly
and successfully on his medical experiences, but most does not. There is a cool intelligence and
compassion throughout which one can think of as exemplifying the ideal doctor, but little which fits easily
with lazier notions of “medical humanities”. Rather, the driving force is an awareness of cultural heritage.
Music and literature are everywhere. The girl, the poet, his late father are all musical, and we learn that
Bronson’s library includes Rilke’s magnificent (and fiercely difficult) Duino Elegies and the like.

Indeed, two poems are addressed to Hypatia, murdered by Christian fanatics in 5th century Alexandria
and one of the first women of learning whose name we know. The destruction of a civilisation which this
event symbolises is at the heart of some bleak meditations for a post 9/11 world:

The world has come to this no heat, no water, no food, but boxes of books in my basement.

The half-dozen love poems with which the volume concludes are serious but occasionally awkward (“a
chamber of rules/ where carnal love reigned”), and there are a couple of pieces of whimsy; but Bronson
at his best is very much worth reading.

(A video log of Bronson reading four of his poems — rather well — is at http://www.poetryvlog.
com/rbronson.html, and one of Bronson’s poems was published in the 2 July issue of the Journal [Med J
Aust 2007; 187: 46].)


John R Skelton
Professor of Clinical Communication
University of Birmingham, UK

Search for Oz

Richard Bronson
Poems
Cover by Wendy Martin
Photo by Maxwell Donis
Back

Review


Padishah Press
In the Season of
Spiders
The Language of Birds
Wearing Masks
Selected Poems
June Evening at Lloyd
Harbor.
Laboratory Assited
Reproduction.
To His Violin