'Smartraveller' by Tracy Ryan
Just knowing those colours makes it safer
already and how they'll change anyway by the time
you, thirteen now, are old enough for elsewhere:
RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN but not about weather
except for extremity and those are most finite
and fickle, cyclones though murderous rarely durable
as human cruelty. Where are you going?
the site prompts but you choose Browse countries
then List all countries, then run the current date –
not to miss anything – every day you check them
like a thing growing in the mind's garden
that needs tending, a world of worrying
for others under some degree of mastery; keep track
of flare-up, pandemic, earthquake, and ask me
sidelong, to define civil unrest, safety and security
though these are terms you know, as if rehearsing,
as if there could be something more the words don't
indicate, a further shade in my palette till now
held back, but I can only disappoint, being arms'-length,
and listen my best as you list the ten tallest mountains
while we head for the school bus because last night
and all this week it was Nepal, and pulling your quilt
around you to ready for sleep was rugging up
for Everest, and before that, another land, one day.
Tracy Ryan
Tracy Ryan won the Peter Porter Poetry Prize in 2009. Her latest collection is Hoard (2015).
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