Category Longer Poetry

nearness

by L.E. WARD a lamp lights                       the back of my eyes metal heats in my skin         veinspinned                          to the table I wake upon your shoulder bladeyour breath               within…

The Gate

by Gregory Piko If I was to walk down the short concrete path between the squares of neatly mown green grass toward the gate with its freshly painted steel bars glowing white in the sunshine like a neon sign; if…

behind the gym

by Pat Saunders kookaburras sang in far eucalypts her head leant back rang out, across the oval a nervy hand found her hip eyes closed waiting mission brown brick dusted her hair Lynx-diluted sweat filtered through vents high above her…

The ocean is teasing me

by Thomas Simpson In open air between tall wetland grass shaking off the smothering wet of weeks in dense forest, mud and growling feral pigs make way for sand and the unreachable sound of rolling waves, somewhere beyond the skeletal…

Juukan Gorge – Western Australia

by Fred Duncan Drill holes in the spinifex break through the Pilbara crust, Red land/hills, red rocks, red sunset – and red a rusted sign: “NO ENTRY: Rio Tinto” – the irony is thrust On people whose existence must align…

kyoto

by Carl Walsh mountains hold names to themselves landscape borrowed transplanted in gardens that twist like lonely water pruned into shape hawk-eyed tombi adjusts air river flows backward caught between forces timbers cut path to near enlightenment feet long to…

Neap

by Les Wicks The tide isn’t waiting now, it never has. Sometimes that house down by the dock had hated certainties… children appeared then left for jobs in a city which made nothing except money. For the aged man resident…

Tuned In To Echoes Of Home

by Rebecca Carr O, where is the moon? Shades of grey is my sky – she cannot be seen. The darkness has worn heavy, and my thread that connects frays. Memories of 90 Mile Beach – Scattered shells, sand; rock…

The Boxing Kangaroo

by Alleyne Hall In memoriam Les Hall, my father, senior constable On stage, aged eleven, before two world wars, then a senior country policeman – where did the years go? How did I get to this place of silence? At…

October’s Cusp

by Suzi Mezei Nestlings plummet hapless from shaken boughs; spat from the maw of the shrieking storm, they land waterlogged on deluged lawn. Cloudburst pastes grey plume to dermis and through water-smeared windows, frogmouths clump like rocks. Outside, under a…