Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Bruce Dawe

Brett Hunt finished with this modern Poem by Australian Poet Bruce Dawe


Homo Suburbiensis


One constant in a world of variables 
-- A man alone in the evening in his patch of vegetables,
 and all the things he takes down with him there  

 Where the easement runs along the back fence and the air smells 
of tomato-vines, and the hoarse rasping tendrils
 of pumpkin flourish clumsy whips and their foliage sprawls


   Over the compost-box, poising rampant upon the palings ...      
           He stands there, lost in a green 
confusion, smelling the smoke of somebody's rubbish 

 Burning, hearing vaguely the clatter of a disk
 in a sink that could be his, hearing a dog, a kid, 
a far whisper of traffic, and offering up instead 

 Not much but as much as any man can offer -- 
time, pain, love, hate, age, ware, death, laughter, fever.   

Can you write a few descriptions about you backyard or Australia?

1 comment:

  1. this is about life in Suburbiensis. i dont get how it starts off rhyming then doesnt in the end to me it sounds very verbal and descriptive but most of the lines i did not understand

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