Gondwana Forest

aussie bush.jpg

Last winter I took a train into Australia’s Blue Mountains. Eucalyptus forests stretched out in every direction around me and the sight and the smell of it made me cry. That night, alone on the land, I was listening to many bird voices that were completely new and strange to me. This vast continent was bringing me in a state of awe. For a week long I got to stay in a little cabin in the bush, a piece of subtropical rainforest friends of mine are living with in the most beautiful way. I felt I didn’t know the rules of the land I was on and felt a lot of respect for what seemed like the dark twin of clearwatered and gentle Aotearoa New Zealand I had just come from. What struck me most of all was the sense of being in an ancient place. I never experienced the Earth in all its countless years in this way before.

This poem is for Aussie and all the wisdom it holds. May the right amount of rain come down and may we remember our relationship to the sacred element fire.

GONDWANA FOREST

They come marching towards you

the creatures of Gondwana forest

they’ll drop a limb to reach you

if they have to

the bird that cries like a baby

the leeches crawling in the creek

those who fly silently at dusk

the two-legged ones

speaking of time before time

his rugged hand caressing

the rippled rock

a puzzle piece of

the tectonic plate of

his heart

pulling the vines

out of the hearth

unveiling the vilest

of thoughts

but some of this water

refuses to turn clean

you might as well

let the lyrebird

lick you clean

touch the bottom of

the billabong

disappear in

the crocodile-coloured water

the breath that escapes

your mouth

forms two bubbles

on the surface

bursting open

when they touch

the land & the people

the land & the people

the land & the people

(March 2019)

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