Wednesday, October 29, 2014

My Father

















He does not listen any more, my Father,
when I phone him from across the world,
same day, same time every week.
His words carry a message he will not speak.
I cannot answer, for what can I offer?

I would like to say that I will be here
to listen again, to believe the past;
stories of old worlds he lived through,
for the present is a confusion.
His eye’s centre has disappeared,
slipped away, blanked out from overuse.
He has seen too much in the tropical suns.

Words I have heard before keep flowing,
as I listen to his breath, 
the heart beneath
and the life,
more precious than I can say.

Monday, October 27, 2014

The Emu Eggs




We climbed the desert mountain,
bush walkers, past pride of youth.
Private journeys across the cliffs
burdened with pain of body and soul,
our backs to the vastness,
mutely we challenged the red rock.

Suddenly, the plateau, beneath the sky.
Nothing else, nothing above.
A lightness of the air, such beauty
surrounded by the expanse.
A view uncontained, layers of blue and purple.
Far below, the bed of an ancient sea.

And there now at our feet, more wonder still.
An emu’s nest, full and round bearing seven eggs.
Here distilled, the colour of tropical seas,
the high wind of the callitris.
A gift beyond expectation,
a journey transformed.


©Anne Chappel

Monday, October 20, 2014

The Ethiopian Coptic Cross






(made from old bullet cases)

Bullet cases from the Sahara,
poor brass discarded
in the shifting sands
from forgotten wars,
one tribe settling
scores of ancient hate
till all memory is lost
of the original sin.

New sins blossom,
the only flowers
in a land where
starving goats hunt
last year’s pods
under dead trees,
and a boy child
watching the hills
balances a rifle
across his knees.

The old man hammers
out of the bullets
holy crosses
whose patterns
hold hands in a
splendour of promise.


©Anne Chappel

Thursday, October 16, 2014

The Shell Collection




Before she died, my friend returned
her shell collection to the sea.
It was where they belonged, she said,
where they gleam brightest.
These are their remains
that in death make a beach.

Caressed by waves, pounded by storms,
marked by tides,
sorted and resorted by shape and size,
part of earth’s pattern in every day’s
new arrangement.

The tide turns and pauses
like a breath, out and in,
then the sigh,
the wait of a moment,
the choice of life rather than death.

And so I remember her.
When I walk the sea’s edge
and stop before a shell,
whose shape and form,
like some treasure dazzles me,
I pass by, letting the earth claim her own.


©Anne Chappel 

Monday, October 13, 2014

Argonaut Sea Gift





Have you ever found a nautilus shell?
On the beach, gleaming
amongst the dark sea wrack
each whorl, curve, indentation
a perfect creation.

Strange traveller of the ocean depths,
part bird, part hero of ancient times.
Home of a fearsome protector
whose lidless eyes saw other worlds
in a journey beyond our imagination.

Now stranded here, a sublime gift.
Fragile perfection borne through the blue
to death on the bright shore.
If god lives, this is his work,
no better could we do.


©Anne Chappel

Sunday, October 12, 2014

No Names but Beauty




I caught a pink snapper
in the first light
pulling from the oil grey sea
a sliver of dawn,
salmon pink stripes
and blue dots,
eyes too large. The sun
spreading as blood.

Round eyes that saw
unblinking, or did not see
as I did, the last
slow waving of her
webbing on translucent fins
against the cruel air.

I did not know
there are shades between pink and pearl
iridescence, for which there are
no names but beauty.

© Anne Chappel

Friday, October 10, 2014

Along the Shore



There are new things
along the shore
where storms have carved
seaweed into dark banks
against fallen stands of sea box.

A solitary gum is dying,
broken glass shines brightly
along the thin shell line.
Beach shacks jostle for the view
sharp edged in the sun,
as buildings grow.

We read the signs
sometimes so gently given
with their own strange beauty
showing us the passing world
that our children will,
crying, try to remember.


© Anne Chappel

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Skinning a Squid



Skinning a Squid         

                        
Its skin comes away in one piece,
translucent, a veil over my hand,
speckled like seaweed
with a thin azure line.
Stretching out, pulled
from the pale flesh.

I remember how its wings flowed,
diamond fins, rippling towards me
as I drew in the deadly barbs
and the invisible line in the dark sea.
Eyes are slippery orbs in the silver head,
I will keep for bait.

The tentacles still stick, holding on.
I cut the skin from the body and scrape
the mess into a bucket where it drops,
with the orbs of testes. The ink,
its purple life-blood, staining my hands.
There lies the sock of its body, milky-white
ready for crumbing and frying.

You can mince the head and innards,
freeze them in cubes for burley.
Let them enter the water once more,
dropping dead lumps to the ocean floor.

Nothing is wasted.


© Anne Chappel

The Alien Immigrants


The Alien Immigrants

In their own way
almost beautiful
these ferals dancing
upon our hillside.
Delicate, so easy
to pull out, roots and all,
they shudder under the sun.
The yellow flowers blooming
far from home:
French Flax, Wild Mustard,
proper names too hard
for us to learn.

We discuss methods
of eradication.
On the fertile ground
by the roadside
We have removed them
with spray and machete,
but up here among the rocks
on our wildest slopes,
they cling with hope.

© Anne Chappel