Friday, 23 September 2011

The primary colours of our land

Send the gaze along a ripple
draw it back
and you will breathe in a gathering
of narratives, stories of stolen harvests,
and robbed water,
the then and now of a little take
and much giving.
Look!
The tree line parts
for the Waste Lands Ordinance,
and there where the water breaks and breaks
in sad heartbeat and longing,
did you see the spectre of indignation rise,
the blood that refused to fall,
the land that was not bartered,
the ways, tender and proud, that stood tall when it could,
bent low when it had to, but never ever panicked?
Look!
Look at the patchwork of green,
light, dark and in-between.
Do you see the cartographer, the advisor and the advised,
arm in arm laughing,
or with grave face expounding on scarcity,
efficiency and productivity?
Do they spell ‘futility’ in not so many words,
do they make you cry?
Sit here until twilight
and let dream converge with prayer
and life will come calling,
not as equation or balance sheet,
but as palms clasped in prayer,
small white flowers and a lamp,
a murmuring, a how-are-you
to an ancient god, benefactor, friend and dependent,
Listen to the night!
It whispers: time is longer than life.
Stay awhile, you don’t have to go.
Offer a tear and a smile
for people who came
and things that will arrive.

[From the poetry collection 'Threads', shortlisted for the Gratiaen Prize 2007]

1 comment:

  1. 'Time is longer than life'. Your writing is so sensitive towards culture. Culture hurts at times and good to know if time and words heals and help to move on.

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