Published 12 April 202412 April 2024 · Friday Poetry Dido Caroline Williamson Growing up not comfortable exactly, there were deaths and silences and other difficult things, when you talk about that history later people are sometimes lost for words. But as you are growing up, things happen to other people which you observe, not fully understanding. Once I said to her, that particular schoolfriend, surely that kind of thing doesn’t happen here? and she just looked at me, and I understood that I had a limited perspective. And there she was, my new friend in my new school, with the best singing voice in the school, a high clear penetrating soprano, effortless and perfectly in tune, when she opened her mouth and sang you could hear her from the back of the hall. Everybody knew she had this incredible voice, like everybody knew that Jill was going out with the coolest boy from the boys’ school, and Jenny was going to get astonishing marks for A-level dressmaking – we watched her sitting confidently over a tailored wool jacket, fixing the lining in place – and also there was Elizabeth who sat quietly at the back of the classroom where A-level maths was being taught, with her own books, and occasionally raised her head to correct the teacher. But back to singing. That year they were casting the school play, which was not a play at all, but Dido and Aeneas, an opera, seventeenth-century, Henry Purcell, written for schoolgirls’ voices. So it was taken for granted that my friend, who I will not name, because this is her story not mine, and she is still out there somewhere as far as I know – we all knew that she would sing Dido, who has a passionate affair with the passing hero Aeneas, he being destined to found Rome, and when he leaves she dies, singing her heart out. But that is not what happened. Some other girl got the part, a year younger, a pretty white girl with a clear soft voice, perfectly in tune but nobody sitting further back in the hall would hear a note. My friend got the slave girl: a single difficult aria. There was quiet shock, how could the adult world make such an obvious mistake? Somebody walked past as the music teacher was being interrogated by another teacher, and what the music teacher said was, ‘But you couldn’t have a black Dido.’ As though this was self-evident. Common sense. I went home and told my father, who was himself not always reliable on matters of race, I knew that already. But on this he was spot on. ‘Oh for gods sake, Dido was Tunisian, she probably was black.’ And when he came to our not very good performance and sat somewhere near the back of the hall, he reported that the only audible soloist was the slave girl. I sang in the chorus, having a sweet voice like Dido, inaudible to anyone at a distance. Other things happened and some of them were worse, but this one sticks in the mind. Also I can’t be repeating everything that happened to her in those years, it was her life not mine, and even this retelling could be taken as a betrayal, an exploitation. I can’t send this poem in for a competition, suppose it won, and I don’t own the subject matter. What I was learning from her was that I was comfortable in ways she would never be able to take for granted. I had my own issues, the two of us bonding around not having our mothers, muddling through adolescence, struggling with things that were easy for other girls. And then our lives diverged, she married, moved north to university while I stayed down south, and afterwards I became busy with feminism and work and finding my own ways through life, and eventually took myself off to Australia. We were both up to our necks in life. I remember A-level French, sitting together, the teacher late for class, and we compared our hands. Hers were curved and brown with beautiful fingernails. Mine lanky and about as pale as any human skin ever. I wish I had long thin fingers, she said, and I longed for fingernails like hers. I remember that as though it was last week. What I’ve forgotten is the name of the music teacher. Image: flickr Caroline Williamson Caroline Williamson is a poet and editor, born in the UK and living in Melbourne since 1990. Her poems have been published in journals including Overland, Meanjin, Heat, Rabbit and Cordite, in a number of Newcastle Prize anthologies, and in Contemporary Australian Feminist Poetry (ed. Bonnie Cassidy and Jessica Wilkinson). Her essay ‘Working Methods: Painting, Poetry and the difficulty of Barbara Guest’, based on her Masters minor thesis, was published in Jacket #36. Her PhD in creative writing (Monash 2016) examined some of the ways that poets have attempted to deal with climate change in their work, and explored the lives of her coal-mining ancestors in Wales in an earlier version of Carboniferous. She won the 2014 A.D. Hope Prize for the best postgraduate essay presented at the conference of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, for ‘Beyond Generation Green: Jill Jones and the Ecopoetic Process’. Her collection Time Machines was recently published by Vagabond Press. More by Caroline Williamson › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. 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