Sunday, 28 January 2018

A BUSH CHILDHOOD



It's gone.
I've checked.
I know.

But then,
it never was
much.

Made mostly of scraps;
A rough frame of old bush lumber;
Walls of flattened fuel cans
and lime coated hessian;
A roof of corrugated iron,
battered and rusting.

Scorched by searing summer heat;
Blasted by dust storms;
Chilled by winter frost.

Insubstantial
against the vastness of desert
that stretched in every direction
from the tiny bush town.

But it was home.
Within its walls
were love and care.
At its table
were sustenance and conversation.

For three years
we lived there
when I was a boy.

I'd rise early
and sit on the edge
of the gibber plain
with our dog
watching the sunrise.

One morning
I heard
the jangling of hobbled camels
returning to town
from a night
in the desert.

On another,
there were herds of cattle,
walked in from
an outlying station
for drafting and yarding,
then transport southward
in a train
hauled by a small steam engine.

At the stock-yard
we'd pretend to be cowboys,
prodding the cattle in the loading race
with sticks,
revelling in the dust and noise,
caring little for their terror
or their destination.

One day we hiked
out past the stock cemetery,
of carcasses leering sightless,
scavenged by crows.
We trudged
to the red sand hills,
then back to the rail-line
for a ride home
with the fettlers.

We went barefoot often -
foot-soles like leather
from the searing sand.
In the heat of the day
we'd pause in the scant shadow of a bush,
to choose the next meagre patch of shade,
then run like the wind
to roll on our backs,
waving scorched feet
in the air.

It's still all there in my memory.
Every few years
I take the old track north,
just to check,
to experience again,
to remember.

Other than the vastness of the desert,
it all seems smaller now -
one tiny settlement
within the compass
of an unbroken horizon.

The old house
is just a memory.

It's gone.
I've checked.
I know.

But then,
it never was 
much.
                                                         The old house and where it was.

Thursday, 21 December 2017

CHRISTMAS 2017



"and the angels sang"


I'm not a believer anymore
but last night
I heard angels sing.

Usually
I hear them in birdsong
or feel them in a stirring breeze
or see them in a starry sky.

But last night
they were in a cathedral,
all grey sandstone
ornate woodwork
and stained glass ,
made flat and colourless
against the night sky outside.

Not my usual choice
any more
for sensing
sense beyond mind,
for experiencing
manifestations of deity.

But I felt …
uplifted,
elevated,
transformed;
no longer the unbeliever
that I've become.

Every valley shall be exalted,
a virgin shall conceive,
the eyes of the blind shall be opened …
"Hallelujah!"

The voices soared
to the arches above,
hung on the still spring air,
and reached
into the very soul
of my being.

No!
I'm not a believer anymore
but last night
I heard angels sing.


Reflection on hearing the Adelaide Chamber Singers "Messiah" in St.Peter's Cathedral - November 2017.

SKETCHING 2017

Not much serious work in 2017.
Some playing around trying different things.





A RICH MEMORY



A WALK REMEMBERED
I took the clifftop walk that day,
high above the beach,
walking slowly,
carefully,
leaning
against the force
of a storm
howling in from the ocean.

Standing behind a rock,
looking out to sea,
I saw them,
gliding,
climbing,
swooping,
using the force
of the wind,
seagulls riding a tempest.

Later,
down in a cove,
sheltered from the gale,
I trudged
through sand,
collecting
pebbles and shells,
stepping around rocks
of ancient
ripples engraved in stone.

MORE BUSH POEMS



The old mail road
leaving the modern, sealed
Stuart Highway -
no signage,
just an old tyre still.


         








  Old Mail Road 



Drive slow or you’ll miss it
There’s an old campfire,
no marker, no sign post,
just an old truck tyre.

Forty long miles of plain
with little change,
some low hills on the horizon
with a gap in the range.

You wind through that gap.
Drop well back through the gears.
You’re on rocks now, a creek bed
that’s been dry for years.

More miles to a boundary fence,
a windmill, a gate,
a stockyard, some cattle,
a homestead, a mate.


   APARA 

Around
behind the range
is Apara,
a place
of rocks
and reeds
and tall river gums,
different
from the red
spinifex covered
plain.
Nyaratja
took us there
one day,
showed us
the deep
dark hole
in the reeds
where Wanampi
the creative
water serpent
lived.

Told us
a story,
ancient
yet living,
timeless
yet dated,
for life
moves on
cultures
change
develop
decay.

Nearby
an ancient tree
bears
the scar
cut by
explorers,
a rock face
scratchings
by pioneers
watering
stock.

And so
the sacred
is profaned,
the stories
are forgotten,
the songs
go unsung,
progress
prevails
something
dies.
At Apara in 1970.