What fictional death have you never got over? That's the question asked of our editor Jane Arthur by poet Chris Tse, guest curator of the 'In Memoriam' event at last weekend's LitCrawl in Wellington, a literary festival with a difference. Jane chose Charlotte from E.B. White's enduring classic, Charlotte's Web, and wrote this poem for her.
O arachnid
O literate departed
Carlotta, Lottie, Charlie
Charlotte A. Cavatica
O Charlotte and your wordy web
O you, barn spider, who were at least four times better than any human,
having four times more legs than most of us. And hundreds more babies.
Five hundred and fourteen babies, Charlotte.
Five hundred and fourteen motherless babes.
O arachnid
O literate, beloved departed
The first time we met was because of friendship,
because you heard you were needed.
You weren’t there, then you were,
telling the lonely pig you’d be his friend.
You were kind but blunt
when telling the pig he couldn’t spin a web,
when he thought if you could,
of course he could,
in the way that men do.
O, sister.
O Charlotte, you never tiptoed around the realities of life –
that we need to eat, that we die.
But still, you knew great change
can be made by one small woman
and so you determined to save that pig’s life.
And the way you did it was with kindness and trickery,
for, quoting you,
'If I can fool a bug… I can surely fool a man.'
You used to say:
'I’m in this thing pretty deep now – I might as well go the limit.'
You used to say:
'I can’t arrange my family duties to suit the management of the County Fair.'
Many of us know all too well what you meant, Charlotte.
You saved a life and still the world didn’t go easier on you.
You saved a life through your pregnant exhaustion, and yet.
It’s hard for mothers.
Charlotte, you were persuasive and pacifist.
You used words to sway rats and men.
You built webs and built webs and built webs and built webs.
You gave literally all you had.
And in spite of everything, no one even noticed you.
I’m here to say, in front of this gathering, I did. We did! The kids did.
You said, 'I think I’m languishing, to tell you the truth.'
And then:
Five hundred and fourteen babies, Charlotte.
Five hundred and fourteen motherless babes.
You died alone.
The others left you at the County Fair and returned to the farm, as you wished.
You died, content and alone.
O Charlotte
O arachnid
O literate beloved
’Tis better to have loved and lost
you, Charlotte,
than a living, flesh-and-bones love – sorry,
but our grief for you ends quickly
in a paper flash
when we open the cover of your story
and resurrect you again
and again and again.
Maybe one of the spiders I kill without thinking
is a descendant of yours.
Charlotte, I’ll think of you and the lessons you taught
about life, death and sacrifice
next time I squash an arachnid,
O literate, late beloved.
Jane Arthur
Jane Arthur is one of the editors of The Sapling. She has worked in the New Zealand book industry for over 15 years, in bookselling and publishing, and has a Masters of Creative Writing from the IIML at Victoria University. She won the 2018 Sarah Broom Poetry Prize, judged by US poet, Eileen Myles. Jane was born in New Plymouth, and lives in Wellington.