Douglas Livingstone - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
zoom
 Livingstone at Work
|
Douglas Livingstone (1932- 1996) was born in Kuala
Lumpur,
Malaysia,
and came to South Africa with his family at ten years of
age. He went to school
at Kearsney College in Natal, and trained as a
bacteriologist at the Pasteur
Institute in Salisbury, now Harare, in Zimbabwe. Livingstone
was
employed as a marine biologist at the Council for
Scientific and Industrial
Research (CSIR) in Durban from 1964. He produced several
volumes of poetry including The Skull in the Mud
(1960, a pamphlet),
Sjambok and Other Poems from Africa (1964),
Poems (1968, with Thomas
Kinsella and Anne Sexton), Eyes Closed against the Sun
(1970), A
Rosary of Bone (1975, republished with additional
poems in 1983), The
Anvil's Undertone (1978), A Littoral Zone
(1991), Giovanni Jacopo
meditates (1995), and Selected Poems (1984).
His translations of
Shona poetry with Phillip Berlyn are collected in Eight
Shona Poems and
Wilson Chivaura: Dreams. He also wrote radio plays
entitled The Sea My
Winding Sheet (1964; pub. 1971, revised 1978) and A
Rhino for the
Boardroom (1974, a prose satire). Michael Chapman is
the author of an
insightful literary study of Livingstone??s poetry entitled
Douglas
Livingstone: A Critical Study of His Poetry (1981).
Livingstone received the BBC Federal Broadcasting
Corporation Prize (1964), the Guinness Poetry Prize
(1965), the Cholmondeley
Poetry Prize (1970), the Olive Schreiner Prize (1975) for
his second radio play,
and the CNA Award (1985) for Selected Poems. He
died in Durban where he
had lived and worked for many years.
Selected Workfrom Eyes Closed Against the Sun
(1970)
Wall-to-wall city
on a rainy night; eleven
stories up and the wonder-hour-hand when
is 4 a.m. with only a very quiet Kenton
accompanying the one-sky-lamp in
the corner. Yes, she's gone, warm to bed.
The floor feels strangely concrete-solid
despite the undermining gusts walled outside.
Wet beetles lie parked under street lamps, dead.
The wakeful rain musics back no April
in Paris, nor stale old Stars fell
on Alabama. Somewhere, space unfurls
its furnaced seasons. Somewhere, over the sill,
crooked as the iced-sucker wrapper flies,
the holiday surf, swelled into its own, says:
The sshun'sh gone. The night-tide ebbs and soughs
loud and lording it unchallenged upon the shores
of South Beach, North Beach, Country Club.
Even the sherry-drinkers have long stubbed
the last drag. The street's hands are cupped;
the stars, maybe forever, are all washed up.
Spinal Column
The first sputnik blipped above me
where I worked twelve metres down
at the jaws of dam construction
in an outraged Zambezi;
hearing the broadcast about it
that evening, recalled a light chord tied at my back which
strung
the man groping in mud
to sometime starmen, knotted
under my ancient aqualung.
(from The Anvil's Undertone, 1978)
Douglas Livingstone reads
Spinal
Column
zoom
 The Bluff Whaling Station
|
Bibliography1960. The skull in the mud
1963. The sea my winding sheet. (radio verse play)
1964. Sjambok
1970. Eyes closed against the sun
1975. A Rosary of Bone. (repr. 1983)
1978. The Anvil's Undertone.
1983. A Rosary of Bone.
1984. Selected Poems.
1988. Sjambok and other poems.
1991. A Littoral Zone.
1995. Giovanni Jacopo meditates.
For more information please visit
KZN Literary
Tourism
- Durban -
- Index -
|
|