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Publié par | Puncher & Wattmann |
Date de parution | 01 février 2023 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9781922571779 |
Langue | English |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0400€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
By the same author:
Poetry
First Names
The Yellow Gum’s Conversion
The Ladder
Non-fiction
The Selected Poetry of Guido Cavalcanti
Dear Muses? Essays on Poetry
© Simon West 2018
This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of study and research, criticism, review or as otherwise permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission. Inquiries should be made to the publisher.
First published in 2018
Published by Puncher and Wattmann PO Box 279 Waratah NSW 2298 http://www.puncherandwattmann.com puncherandwa ttmann@bigpond.com
ISBN 9781925780109 (paperback) ISBN 9781922571779 (ebook)
Cover design by Miranda Douglas
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.
in memoriam
D. W. W.
Contents
River Tracks
Hans Heysen
On a Trip to Van Diemen’s Land
Floodplains on the Broken River
Uncanny Nature
On Looking into a Chinese Scroll
A Monologue on the Soul and Body
Waking on a Summer Morning
The Turtles and the Waterfall – a Dream
Back at the Broken River
The Limits of Parable
Yore
On Reading Again of David and Goliath
Psalm
Agave on the Victorian Coast
The Lorikeets
Boundary Line
Walking in the Bush at Whroo
After Looking at Donatello’s Reliefs for the Pulpit of Prato
How Else?
A Twenty-First Century Poet Timidly Addresses the Muse
How it Should Be
The Magic Box – Nonna Tells a Fairy Tale
Swimming
The Twofold Tree
A Goulburn Valley Eclogue
Acknowledgments
River Tracks
Never a straight line or a single course,
never blue. Most maps mistell you.
Eager to find where you finish,
they mistake your daydreaming, your loops
and faux pas and odd sidesteps,
your misgivings and floods of largesse.
Round Murchison it’s said the Ngooraialum
called you Bayungun, but Mitchell
might have got this wrong. Waaring
was also recorded, while downstream you were Kialla
and Goopna, deep waterhole,
living on in Congupna and Tallygaroopna.
Tongue sounds taken for runs, then stations
and finally the towns that drank you –
black names that gave white settlers licence to the land.
Your big-picture title, Goulburn, was something new.
More skittish than Proteus, all water’s ancestor,
you’ve flowed through many guises, your track
was spun to unravel without end.
Was it merely a twist of fate
that one of your Yorta Yorta names was Moira?
Rarely have you had to hop, skip and jump
through drought like your cousin the Broken.
From the up-high of satellite and migrating bird,
who know their course by impulse,
you’re as unkempt as a camper’s hair,
as fickle and fractious as a child,
you’re running hands-first through the dark,
going the long way to the sea.
Round Shepp I walk a tract of park
scooped by your failed forays, trenches
greedy with grass and frog croaks.
Some open to billabongs, those castaways
that await like long-suffering red gums
your next incursion and siege. They dream
of a time when you rise to conquer clay
baked hard and fissured and tinder raw,
when you release each rut of old snags
and your salve spreads like a truce
submerging paddocks and fences,
licking at roads and property,
letting us bide for a bit in common reflection.
Hans Heysen
The difficulty in mist-thick light
was to keep the gum tree solid. Its trunk
moves to the top of the frame just like
an obelisk in fog. Like a mother
it holds in the sway of its skirts the lie
of the land to the thumb-tall hills, a litter
of leaves and a passing child; and draws the sky
down from a peak to steep it in the picture.
The difficulty was to keep its bulk
where light-coloured trunk and limbs were seen
against the sun’s raw morning bulb,
to paint the wooded weight of tree,
with its sap and slant and stubborn hold,
yet show light playing through the leaves,
as truth, world’s truth, not absolute, is blent
and filters through our pulsing temperament.
On a Trip to Van Diemen’s Land
Walking above a bluestone bridge I tilt
against the rails. I watch its trickling stream
trying to conjure sentenced men who built
this crossing and set my stage – mid-nineteenth-
century men, hardened by exile till