A
scrunched, fading bookmark fell from a book. It was a cutting, a newspaper poem
by Judith Wright entitled “Computers”. ‘Those things make me nervous/ but not
for the reasons you think,’ she begins, setting up the dichotomy that our ways
are not a poet’s ways. Notice her connection of ‘things’ with ‘think’. ‘Not because
they’ll take away our living;/ if we really liked living/ that wouldn’t matter,/we
could start living instead. You don’t need much money to live.’ She raises this
matter of ‘living’, which is about the most important subject in the world,
more important than computers. Notice how she introduces money from nowhere.
She seems to be making a link between computers and money, one that today has
become profound. Living, for Judith, is about creating, if we are to understand
the next verse aright: ‘Not because they’ll write poems or paint pictures;/ no one
who knows what poetry is/ or what pictures are/ could do more than laugh at
that one.’ This is a confident assertion of the originality of human creation,
made with a certainty based in experience. Laughter, by implication, is not a
computer’s forte. She turns her gaze to society and politics, as was oft her
wont: ‘Not because they’ll start breeding, set up an elite,/ exclude us, run
everything – /anyone who looks can see/ that’s happened already./ We could live
in the gaps between them.’ Judith doesn’t describe these gaps, though we can
intuit plenty of them in the lines of the poem. Instead, we have reached
halfway, which is when she turns to the true explanation of her nervousness. ‘No,
they make me nervous/ because they’re eating us;/ here a muscle, there a mind,/
an action or a vision.’ As elsewhere, she moves quickly from the particular to
the immensely general, invoking in spare lines an incipient negative mood formed
by computers. ‘See: when I said ‘vision’/ it made you smile./ No one now can
have a vision/ because They don’t have them.’ Her conversational mode works to
take us into her confidence. Then, having done so, goes up several registers: ‘We’re
ashamed to fall in love/ because They don’t do it. / We analyse poems instead
of reading them/ because that’s what computers do./ We think it’s square to be
human/ because They aren’t.’ Actually, it’s most computers that are square
(literally), not humans. But we grasp her meaning, computers are some irresistibly
cool invention we tell ourselves we cannot do without. ‘Square’ is the only
word that dates Judith’s poem, which googling reveals was published in the
Sydney Morning Herald on the 18th of June 1966. So, having assessed
the advent of computers, in a poem that bears close analysis, the poet does a
fresh turn of thought, leaving us fairly much squarely where computers started,
the root cause of the problem: ‘No, then it can’t be computers/ that make me
nervous./ It’s us. Perhaps we make them/ because we’re sick of humans.’ I smile
and pin Judith’s poem on the corkboard for further consideration.
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