Tuesday, 11 September 2018

Tuesday Poem: "New Zealand" by James K. Baxter


(for Monte Holcroft)

These unshaped islands, on the sawyer’s bench,

Wait for the chisel of the mind,

Green canyons to the south, immense and passive,

Penetrated rarely, seeded only

By the deer-culler’s shot, or else in the north

Tribes of the shark and the octopus,

Mangroves, black hair on a boxer’s hand.

 

The founding fathers with their guns and bibles,

Botanist, whaler, added bones and names

To the land, to us a bridle

As if the id were a horse: the swampy towns

Like dreamers that struggle to wake,

 

Longing for the poets’ truth

And the lover’s pride. Something new and old

Explores its own pain, hearing

The rain’s choir on curtains of grey moss

Or fingers of the Tasman pressing

On breasts of hardening sand, as actors

Find their own solitude in mirrors,

 

As one who has buried his dead,

Able at last to give with an open hand.


by James K. Baxter

For more information about poet, James K. Baxter, see:



1 comment:

  1. Ummm weren't our founding fathers Maori? I don't think they had guns and bibles

    ReplyDelete