Sunday, 14 February 2021

RUSS

He was short and lean, 
a small man,
station hand and bush jockey.
I’ve known him since childhood
when he was in the children’s home
where my parents worked.
 
At fourteen
he returned to the bush
to work with his father,
also a station hand,
out on the desert plains
where holdings are large,
measured in thousands of square kilometers.
 
We never deliberately kept contact,
just crossed paths 
when he was “down south”
or I was “out bush”.
 
Eventually he retired
to a small bush town,
established to service
the highway
across the centre of Australia
from south to north.
 
I’d see him there when in the bush,
in the bar of the roadhouse.
Sometimes we’d have a beer together,
others I’d just watch him,
sitting on a stool
at the end of the bar,
surrounded by the young stock-hands
in town for a break.
 
But he’s gone now.
Sickness came and eventually death.
They buried him in the country he loved,
out by the cattle yards and race track –
a patch of red dust,
a simple wooden cross,
a low stone wall,
a vase and a whiskey bottle, both empty.
 
I’ve visited him there
and remembered.

 


 

Sunday, 3 January 2021

THOUGHTS FROM A WALK BY THE RIVER (JULY 2008)

Some forgotten Haiku discovered by chance in an old writing book today.

 

WONDER
Such a small planet
in such a vast universe
with so much beauty.

DESPAIR
Such a small planet
in such a vast universe
with so much suffering.

FIRST NIGHT

She wore a dress 
of “Everglaze” cotton that night,   
white with a discreet pattern 
of tiny green roses.
I remember it still.

We walked along the beach
and across the causeway  
to a rocky island
where we sat
above the pounding waves
of the Southern Ocean.

 We were volunteers

at a children’s summer vacation program
and really knew nothing
about each other,
so we just sat and talked,
sharing our two
quite different pasts;
no touching or cuddling.
just talk.

At the end of the program I inquired

“Would you like to meet again?” 
and she agreed –
so here we are,
sixty one years later;
two lives so richly shared,
through so many experiences,
and in so many places;
so many memories,
so many friends
and our own wonderful family.

How fortunate we have been.

A MEMORY

It was a tiny church
in the valley, by the creek;
a place for those who search,
a haven for the meek.

This quatrain is about the little church where we were married, located at Aldgate Valley in the Adelaide Hills in South Australia. It has now been sold and incorporated into an almost palatial residence on the site.