Maureen Clifford ©
The Scribbly Bark Poet
Just as they did
in days long gone they crossed the desert hot
and dry, treeless and flat as well – an earthbound
living hell
bordered by oceans
mighty waves that beat against the cliffs
relentlessly with
no respite as history does tell.
It seems that every
day there is a pilgrimage of sorts
but rare
to see an Afghan cameleer to Mecca pray.
Two long grey snakes
crawl side by side across the dark red sands,
grey nomads in
their hundreds on the track –vans bounce and sway.
Their journeys end is very far from here, on
this big plain
the road, by headlights lit sometimes – the night sky
lit by star.
They’ve no need of
a stable or a place to rest their heads
but a roadhouse
lights are welcome and a cold beer at the bar.
In shadows ‘neath
the towering cliffs and powerful ocean waves
below, in waters
frothed with cream a whale hoves into sight
to frolic with the
seals that cluster all along the shore
she’s come back to
her birthing place to birth, this Southern Right .
And from the north
Anangu came across Yalata land
to camp high on
the Bunda Cliffs as they had always done
to honour the
dream serpent and to give praise to the Mother
for her blessings
and her bounty and her gifts shared with each one.
Above the
southern skies put on a beautiful display,
bright nebulae mere
wisps of light – star nurseries in the sky,
a band of light in
darkness shining bright – The Milky Way.
Below, the Right
whale birthed her calf – the oceans heard her cry.