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Gene
Senior Member
since 2000-01-23
Posts 935
Colorado, USA

0 posted 2000-03-04 11:02 PM


Please read this list of terms first, for background information--

Aborigine – The indigenous peoples of Australia—the word Koori is sometimes preferred.  
Muniong (Munyang) – Aboriginal name for the Snowy Mountains.
Murray, Tumet, Murrumbidgee, Snowy – Rivers on the slopes of the Muniong.
Last of Lands – A term, meaning Australia.
Shaman – A medicine man.
Kookaburra – Bird native to Australia.
Cuck’unda – Aboriginal name for the Laughing Kookaburra.

----------

"Leaf Searcher"


From where the Muniong’s highest stand;
Where the Murray, Tumet and Murrumbidgee flow;
Out of the Last of Lands, there came a man,
Whence a legend grows:
As the south winds blow though Tasman Seas,
     and the clouds halo the moon with a killing frost breeze;
Along a river, Snowy, in late of Autumn’s freeze,
     an old shaman Aborigine shivers on bended knee                      
     as he takes retreat beneath a barren tree.
As the night weaves the blanket of the earth that it warms,
     the old man covers himself with leaves, which he adorns.
Protected from an impending storm,
     only the tip of his oversized nose, slightly exposed,
     betrays the shape of his human form.
Then, a Laughing Kookaburra lands upon the branch                    
     on which one defiant leaf stands proud,
     holding on tight until things thaw out.  
As the cackling Cuck’unda from down und’a,
     stretches his neck in an attempt to peck the leaf from its perch,
     it causes the leaf to fall towards earth,
     landing precisely upon the proboscis robustus,
     once barely publicus.
And so, the weary traveler sleeps,
     now completely concealed;
     determined not to awake until spring’s yield.  
But, in his dreamtime walkabout quest,
     unable to rest, he wanders forever lost, never to be found;
     not even a trace, when the thaw reveals the ground.  
And, the Kookaburra laughs with a perfunctory sound,
     as the shaman’s spirit walks the earth each year
     in search of the one leaf that made him disappear.


-----
Gene



© Copyright 2000 Gene M. - All Rights Reserved
Little_Spyro
Senior Member
since 2000-01-09
Posts 659
San Diego, CA, USA
1 posted 2000-03-04 11:05 PM


Wow, Gene, this is probably one of your best works yet! Great rhythm and rhyme, and incredible use of words! This is great!  

Hope to see more like this!!  

Little Spyro T. Dragon

Janet Marie
Member Laureate
since 2000-01-22
Posts 18554

2 posted 2000-03-04 11:36 PM


WOW is right..Gene this is excellent..perfection of poetry..creative, imaginative and full of imagery. very nice!!
jm

 ...every moment of every day...
your still with me in every way.
every poem and song...
every rhyme and verse...
your still here...like a beautiful curse.
janet marie


Munda
Member Elite
since 1999-10-08
Posts 3544
The Hague, The Netherlands
3 posted 2000-03-05 12:13 PM


Gene ! I am in total awe!!!   I could even hear the Kookaburra ! Great poem Gene.  
childomine
Senior Member
since 2000-01-25
Posts 818
st. petersburg, FL
4 posted 2000-03-05 09:08 AM


Thanks for the intoduction with the meanings of the terms. This is an awesome poem.  The mountains, the cold, the leaf....  everything seemed so vivid. I wanted to touch the hand of the Shaman and feel his mystique. "as the shamnans spirit walks the earth..."  "searching..." gave me chills.
Denise
Moderator
Member Seraphic
since 1999-08-22
Posts 22648

5 posted 2000-03-05 09:51 AM


Very creative, Gene! Wonderful tale!

Denise

Sasikat
Member
since 2000-02-02
Posts 290
St. Petersburg, FL
6 posted 2000-03-05 11:04 AM


Gene,

This is magnificent.  I could picture so vividly every word and felt as if I were the one observing.

Sheila

KimW
Member
since 2000-03-04
Posts 268
Medford, Oregon, USA
7 posted 2000-03-05 03:55 PM


Incredible sense of "being there" rather then reading. The imagery, expression, use of words were very "vivid."

Kim

Jonas
Senior Member
since 2000-03-03
Posts 796
Oregon
8 posted 2000-03-05 04:01 PM


This is wonderful gene. I've met several poets from Australia and I love the descriptions of their land that they include in their poetry. Bravo!

 Simple words from a simple guy

Gene
Senior Member
since 2000-01-23
Posts 935
Colorado, USA
9 posted 2000-03-05 05:22 PM


Thanks, Everyone.
I'm glad you liked it. I had fun writing it.

Jonas, I'm not "The Man From Snowy River." I'm the man from Colorado. I just like Australia.  

Oh, I like your Tasmanian Devil.

~Gene

[This message has been edited by u_gene (edited 03-05-2000).]

passing shadows
Member Empyrean
since 1999-08-26
Posts 45577
displaced
10 posted 2004-12-25 09:30 AM


awesome piece!
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