INK IN HER VEINS: The
Troubled Life of Aileen Palmer
SYLVIA MARTIN
University of Western Australia Publishing, 2016, 328 pages
Review by Phil Shannon
In 1939, a young Australian woman grabbed the international headlines
when she threw red paint from a thermos flask onto the doorsteps of 10 Downing
Street, whilst distributing leaflets hidden in copies of the Ladies Home Journal, to protest the
blood that the British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, had on his hands
for selling out Spain and Czechoslovakia to European fascism.
Aileen Palmer was fined five shillings for her dissent but worse
was to come for her rebellious ways, as the University of Tasmania’s Sylvia
Martin discusses in her biography of the anti-fascist, communist, poet and
lesbian.
The daughter of the prominent, left-wing Australian
literature figures, Vance and Nettie Palmer, Aileen joined the Communist Party
of Australia in the early 1930s, spurred by Depression-era economic crisis, fascism
and war.
Palmer was in Barcelona as a translator for the upcoming Olimpiada Popular (‘the People’s
Olympics’), organised by Spain’s left-wing Popular Front government to counter
the forthcoming Nazi Olympics in Berlin in 1936, when the fascists’ assault in
Spain abruptly cancelled the proletarian games.
Joining the volunteer International Brigades as an interpreter for the
British Medical Aid Unit, Palmer put her political convictions, linguistic
skills (fluent Spanish, French, German) and youthful drive at the service of the
Spanish Republic against the Franco/Hitler/Mussolini military attack.
The up-close pain and death that came to her with each
lorry-load of bodies was a harsh initiation into adulthood for the teenage
Palmer. Between savage offensives,
however, time dragged and tempers frayed in the personality-chafing, close
proximity of her medical team. Class tensions
(working class ambulance mechanics versus Cambridge-trained doctors) and
political tensions (Communist versus non-Communist volunteers) exacerbated the difficulties. Yet Palmer always regarded Spain as the political
highlight of her life.
Although her return to Australia after the second world war saw
Palmer continue her political and literary activism (against nuclear weapons
and the Vietnam War), she was increasingly blighted by mental health problems.
Post-traumatic stress disorder from her war experience (‘the
unbearable noise within’ her head, as a sympathetic sister poet put it)
combined with bipolar disorder to create manic-depressive mood-swings and
psychotic episodes. This pot was kept brewing
by the “tangled web of the Palmer family’s emotional dynamics” in which Palmer
felt “submerged resentment” towards her parents, who under-valued their
daughter’s chosen art form of the poem.
To further compound her psychological distress, Palmer’s lesbianism
remained clandestine, deemed by contemporary social mores “to be sick or
unnatural”, making her sexuality feel distasteful even to herself. Palmer’s ‘shock treatments’ (including
Electro-Convulsive Therapy) involved harrowing convulsions, coma and memory
loss, and often made her mental state worse rather than better.
Palmer died in 1988 in a psychiatric nursing home, aged
73. There were no obituaries, no
tributes. Sylvia Martin’s book (although
overly-reliant on heavy chunks of Palmer’s diary) puts this to rights for
Aileen Palmer, socialist and ‘poet of conscience’.