Sarah’s Musings on Katherine Mansfield and her poem “The Meeting”

Katherine Mansfield and “The Meeting” – Listening Beneath the Words

I am pleased to introduce a new thread within Rebecca’s Reading Room, one that occasionally brings conversations from The Book Dialogue into this quieter reading space. My sister Sarah and I host The Book Dialogue, a podcast devoted to books, poetry, and the shared pleasure of reading together. From time to time, I’ll be inviting readers of the Reading Room to linger with these conversations here, allowing them to unfold slowly on the page, just as they once did in voice.

In this offering, Sarah recites and reflects on “The Meeting” by Katherine Mansfield, a writer whose work, both in prose and poetry, attends closely to the inner life. Mansfield’s words do not announce their meaning; they invite us to step nearer, to listen more carefully.

Katherine Mansfield (14 October 1888 – 9 January 1923) (Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

A Brief Portrait of Katherine Mansfield

Born Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp in Wellington, New Zealand, Katherine Mansfield (1888–1923) left her homeland as a young woman to pursue a literary life in Europe. She became one of the most influential voices of literary modernism, admired for her ability to capture fleeting emotional moments with remarkable clarity and restraint.

Mansfield’s life was shaped by restlessness, intense relationships, financial uncertainty, and prolonged illness. Tuberculosis marked her later years, often forcing her into periods of isolation and separation from those she loved. Yet it was within these constraints that her writing deepened, turning ever more attentively toward the subtleties of feeling, anticipation, and inner conflict.

Though she is best known for her short stories, Mansfield also wrote poetry that mirrors the same qualities of compression, emotional precision, and an acute sensitivity to moments that hover just before change.

The Meeting

by Katherine Mansfield

We started speaking,
Looked at each other, then turned away.
The tears kept rising to my eyes.
But I could not weep.
I wanted to take your hand
But my hand trembled.
You kept counting the days
Before we should meet again.
But both of us felt in our hearts
That we parted for ever and ever.
The ticking of the little clock filled the quiet room.
“Listen,” I said. “It is so loud,
Like a horse galloping on a lonely road,
As loud as a horse galloping past in the night.”
You shut me up in your arms.
But the sound of the clock stifled our hearts’ beating.
You said, “I cannot go: all that is living of me
Is here for ever and ever.”
Then you went.
The world changed. The sound of the clock grew fainter,
Dwindled away, became a minute thing.
I whispered in the darkness. “If it stops, I shall die.” 

https://youtu.be/C8Rbny7ILeY?si=CTrx1VIl5Di2WaZV

The Meeting” was written during the final years of Mansfield’s life, around 1918–1920. By this time, much of her experience was defined by waiting. Waiting for health, for companionship, for moments of closeness that were often delayed or imperfectly realized. The poem is not directly about a specific biographical event, nor is it an elegy. Instead, it arises from an emotional landscape Mansfield knew well. A life lived in intervals. Rather than dramatizing reunion or fulfillment, she turns her attention to the threshold. The moment of approach, the quiet expectancy before connection.

This restraint was central to her modernist sensibility. Mansfield believed that meaning resides not in grand declarations, but in what is held back, felt, and sensed beneath the surface. After experiencing profound loss, including the death of her beloved brother during the First World War, she no longer trusted permanence. Presence became precious. Anticipation carried weight. In “The Meeting,” what matters is not what happens next, but what is felt in the waiting.

Hearing “The Meeting” read aloud allows its stillness to emerge more fully. The poem does not rush toward resolution. It lingers, asking us to remain present with uncertainty, with feeling that has not yet found its form. In this way, the poem aligns beautifully with the spirit of The Book Dialogue, a conversation between two sisters who value listening as much as speaking, and who believe that literature is not something to be mastered, but met.

Perhaps every meaningful poem is a meeting of this kind, shaped by what the writer has endured, and completed only when a reader is willing to arrive slowly.

Rebecca

#KatherineMansfield #PoetryInTheAfternoon #PoetryRecitation #PoetrySalon #TheBookDialogue #TheMeeting

There is an #AncientRule
If #TheMeeting does not have the following
Posted Agenda
Notes with attendees documented
Said notes sent after the meeting

Then that meeting is a #WasteOfTime

‘Undercover’ Helmer Arantxa Echevarría Boards Taut Drama ‘The Meeting’

An unprecedented co-production between Vietnam, Chile and Spain, ‘The Meeting,’ has found its director, Arantxa Echevarría.

Variety

Today I learned that my friends (and my husband) can keep a secret from me. It was a lovely surprise party, I was relaxed to an unusual level - because I usually need to think about $things and am late with organizing $stuff.
Himself and I were on the way to have a late birthday dinner when he suggested to have an aperitif at #theMeeting on the way, where my friends were hiding behind a curtain.
Now I‘m drunk, tired and expected to play Padel in a few hours.

https://mendeddrum.org/@fluffcthulhu/113805929796582403

Fluff the Plush Cthulhu (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image Hello Dortmund, I am in you and partying. Happy birthday minion @[email protected]

The Mended Drum

Katherine Mansfield, an acclaimed writer and poet, is known for her exceptional storytelling and deep exploration of human emotions. Her poetry, just like her prose, offers a profound and unique perspective on life, love, and the complexities of relationships, delving into the depths of human experiences. Her poems touch upon themes of longing, loss, and the transient nature of existence. Through her evocative language and vivid imagery, she invites us to contemplate the intricacies of our inner worlds and the emotions that shape them.

The Book Dialogue Podcast

My sister, Sarah and I host a podcast dedicated to poetry and books – The Book Dialogue. We love of all things literature and enjoy connecting with others to share the joy of reading.

In a recent podcast, Sarah discussed and recited Katherine Mansfield’s poem “The Meeting.” The poem’s language and imagery allow listeners to immerse themselves in contemplation evoked by her words. Katherine Mansfield creates an emotional connection with words that lingers long after the poem is read.

The Meeting

By Katherine Mansfield

We started speaking,
Looked at each other, then turned away.
The tears kept rising to my eyes.
But I could not weep.
I wanted to take your hand
But my hand trembled.
You kept counting the days
Before we should meet again.
But both of us felt in our hearts
That we parted for ever and ever.
The ticking of the little clock filled the quiet room.
“Listen,” I said. “It is so loud,
Like a horse galloping on a lonely road,
As loud as a horse galloping past in the night.”
You shut me up in your arms.
But the sound of the clock stifled our hearts’ beating.
You said, “I cannot go: all that is living of me
Is here for ever and ever.”
Then you went.
The world changed. The sound of the clock grew fainter,
Dwindled away, became a minute thing.
I whispered in the darkness. “If it stops, I shall die.”

Sarah’s Musings on Katherine Mansfield and her poem, “The Meeting”.The Book Dialogue

S4 E13: Sarah’s Musings on Katherine Mansfield and her poem, “The Meeting”.The Meeting by Katherine MansfieldWe started speaking,Looked at each other, then turned away.The tears kept rising to my eyes.But I could not weep.I wanted to take your handBut my hand trembled.You kept counting the daysBefore we should meet again.But both of us felt in our heartsThat we parted for ever and ever.The ticking of the little clock filled the quiet room."Listen," I said. "It is so loud,Like a horse galloping on a lonely road,As loud as a horse galloping past in the night."You shut me up in your arms.But the sound of the clock stifled our hearts' beating.You said, "I cannot go: all that is living of meIs here for ever and ever."Then you went.The world changed. The sound of the clock grew fainter,Dwindled away, became a minute thing.I whispered in the darkness. "If it stops, I shall die."Voice by Sarah AhmadiPhotography by Rebecca BuddMusic by Sight of Wonders “A Shade of Steam” Epidemic Soundhttp://www.epidemicsound.com/track/eU5T5zuehK/ Sarah’s Musings on Katherine Mansfield and her poem, “The Meeting”.04:47Surrounded by Idiots by Thomas Erikson14:05The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion15:24Learning French, Reading French13:14Metropolitan Stories: A Novel by Christine Coulson16:40

This is your invitation to join Sarah and me on The Book Dialogue Podcast.

https://ladybudd.com/2023/12/10/the-meeting-by-katherine-mansfield/

#KatherineMansfield #Poetry #PoetryRecitation #SarahAhmadi #TheBookDialogue #TheMeeting

The Book Dialogue

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