I write this poem and I know I look toward a view,
Which a Kurnai family looked out up on,
Not so long ago.
Although obscured by trees.
I know this from the tools they left behind.
I find them when I dig out potatoes,
Or make a new hole for a fence post.
Stones fashioned with sharp edges.
Worn river stones with ground indentations.
Also small lumps of red clay-stone.
Completely misplaced in their habitat of quartz and granitic sand.
Sometimes I feel pleasantly haunted.
I imagine people's song,
In the swirling, rustling of forest leaves.
I think about them as I walk,
Mindfully.
I can imagine them singing their country,
Their foot-falls in unison with their beating hearts,
Like my own.
It is said,
this valley means possum.
In my mind I see,
Mothers in possum skin cloaks,
Their babes bundled snugly on their backs.
The Kurnai are coastal people,
But our valley stands on a 'way'.
A well walked route to the higher Monaro plains.
I like to dream and draw,
The ancient earth creatures,
Said to inhabit this land;
Dimbulan, Dulagar, Nyol, Bagini.
they enliven my imagination.
I feel enriched by this place,
and all I survey.
Here's the challenge - compose a poem each day for one year, that reflects my agrarian life. On our hobby farm on the edge of the Monaro my husband Matthew and I raise children (I have eight, though only five remain at home), sheep, goats, chooks, piglets, a milking cow and her calf, fruit and vegies. To support this enterprise I teach in the remotest school in Victoria - if anywhere in Victoria is truly remote.
Showing posts with label Aboriginal culture. land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aboriginal culture. land. Show all posts
Saturday, 17 January 2015
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