The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Mark Jay Brewin, Jr.
Below Corson's Inlet Bridge
The heavens reed-thin, the ocean surface lunar-bruised, and the horseshoe crabs' rustle silenced to a shore of wave-split fossils— plated scuttle-legs gull-picked—surrounded us as we crawled out onto the slippery mess of seaweed-slicked rocks pocked with mussels and barnacles that pierced the bustle and crash of ocean's swell and foamy lace.
Sitting Indian style on the dock, we passed around the thought of how we might die—cancer, or some fatal blockage—and found a beached dogfish on the dune path back, too scared to poke it for fear of its bite, although we knew it had long since air-drowned. Ned Kelly Exiled In New Zealand
As Transcribed By A Public House Patron Onto A Peeled Whisky Label, 1930:
Take your man here, as remarkable now as a weasel in the brush. I was but an hour from the hangman's noose when two men loosed my shackles and bid me not even breath save I wished the police to give chase again. A long week at sea. A few pounds given me for the landing and there after. In youth, I found it shameful to ride the shanks mare, and there I was, strolling the long road to Greymouth. First parcel of years, I chanced the arm at the honest plough and played knuckles back of the pub, but the blaggard's errand even followed me here. Fooling horse brands was as simple as the sleeves on a dustcoat, till a gelding reared and crippled my right hand. I could feel the heft of armor bogging my trunk. Tell me, what sits before you? Any of my breed marked by the gun grows to a blathering drunk. I would have rather choked. The clouds were outturned pockets, and still too thin to sling a shadow. You can't guess the colours in the wombat ranges' evening sash. The last words my mother spoke to me was "Mind you die like a Kelly," and they clanged worse than chains. So I will die here, an island away from my own, in this place, where a lighthouse keeper's cat can blot out a whole chime of wren forever. Where magpies pipe as the calls of other birds, the ring of bullets, feral horses in the bush. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |