Emily Dickinson
Elizabeth Bishop
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Stephen Spender
Fleur Adcock
Grace Nichols
James K. Baxter
Charlotte Mew
Siegfried Sassoon
Boey Kim Cheng
Wilfred Owen
Hone Tuwhare
Edwin Muir
Boey Kim Cheng
Robert Greene (1560-92)
‘For Heidi With Blue Hair ’ is a poem that uses action and dialogue rather than physical description to tell a story. The important themes are revealed gradually through the characters’ actions and words. What emerges is a mixture of humour and tragedy.
The essence of the story is that the girl, H...
When you dyed your hair blue
(or, at least ultramarine
for the clipped sides, with a crest
of jet-black spikes on top)
you were sent home from school
because, as the headmistress put it,
although dyed hair was not
specifically forbidden, yours
was, apart from anything else,
not done in the school colours.
Tears in the kitchen, telephone-calls
to school from your freedom-loving father:
'She's not a punk in her behaviour;
it's just a style.' (You wiped your eyes,
also not in a school colour.)
'She discussed it with me first -
we checked the rules.' 'And anyway, Dad,
it cost twenty-five dollars.
Tell them it won't wash out -
not even if I wanted to try.'
It would have been unfair to mention
your mother's death, but that
shimmered behind the arguments.
The school had nothing else against you;
the teachers twittered and gave in.
Next day your black friend had hers done
in grey, white and flaxen yellow -
the school colours precisely:
an act of solidarity, a witty
tease. The battle was already won
For Heidi With Blue Hair was written by Fleur Adcock.
Heidi is Fleur Adcock’s neice.