Lesley Lebkowicz
we write small poems
make pots that shatter –
if not in fire then falling
from careless hands –
all this to make sense of
the random moments
parading past our hearts
in chaos. instead
we should write poems
make pots that shatter –
if not in fire then falling
from careless hands –
< ...
(first stanza after Rosemary Dobson’s Over the Frontier)
The pot I imagine
is always better
than the one
I make.
But after all these years
my hands are learning
how to work cla ...
1 They know the subtler shades of green and where each one belongs;
2 and some reds:
ochre, orange and something aching towards crimson –
all in a single patch;
3 &nb ...
The gentle hills north of Taralga
unfold as though
everything were possible. Trees
grow. Their crowns shift in the small wind
showing off new leaf tips: pink, green, a hint
of blue. The cows in the paddocks are big
and brown. They browse and stare
into space. One lays her head on her friend’s
shoulder. Their calves lollop around
getting ...
Five ducks are standing
on a narrow strip of concrete
designed to ease boats into the water.
They have their backs to me;
even so, at the sound of my steps,
they slide into the lake.
A moorhen rises up and
onto the concrete.
She raises the dark wedge of her tail
and shits a neat soft gleaming pile
then steps towards me
small ...
Lesley Lebkowicz has been publishing poetry since the early 1980s. Her last book, The Petrov Poems (Pitt Street Poetry), won a Canberra Critics’ Circle award, was shortlisted for the 2014 ACT Book of the ...