Made ghosts in all their country’s warsthey come, the young men in my dreamswith shattered skulls, intestines trailingin the sand, the mud, the stuff the TV doesn’tshow unless it’s Africa. Or someplace else wherecolour doesn’t count, democracy a wordthey carted like a talisman, a passportto the candles, bells of sainthood.
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Fay Zwicky
Fay Zwicky is the author of several collections of poetry, including Kaddish and Other Poems (1982) and Picnic: New Poems (2006). Her awards include the 2005 Patrick White Award. She lives in Western Australia.
Without the support of a recognisably unified literary tradition, the Australian poet has had to come to terms with the diverse elements of an increasingly heterogeneous culture. Australia is, was, and ever shall be, someone else’s country, a homeland so fundamentally altered as a concept as to be no longer comfortably recognisable as ‘Home’. Paradoxically, if anything has drawn Australian p ... (read more)
After John Bunyan
My Mužka (‘little fly’ in Czech)Goes softly but she goeth sure.She stumbles not as larger creatures do,Her journey’s shorter so she may endureMore puissant than do those who further go.
Right at my feet she canny curls,She makes no noise but delicately pawsThe bony beast appointed for her meal,Feeds quiet, a marvel of containment.
Her modest inch of soul shines clearFro ... (read more)
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