FIBONACCI POETRY

VIRGINIA GOW

Monday, December 31, 2012

FIREWORKS DISPLAY


FIREWORKS DISPLAY                                                            Virginia Gow 01/01/13

Look! The humans queue for a day
To watch a fireworks display
Costing millions, but who pays?
Whilst in Sarawak a dam is built
To destroy a river, there is no guilt!
Displace human habitat, a sense of place.
Create more misery, down forests in haste.
Ancient cultures lost in the mists.
Who knows or cares about the risks.
To forest air, we breathe in vain.
Fight for the rights of these nature folk.
United Nations, this is no joke.
Are humans never going to learn
That by their greed, all Earth will burn?
So do the ones from outer space,
Queue to watch this planet
Go up in smoke?
Now that’s a fireworks display
That beats all those around the world,
A great big bang, to our dismay.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

EJ's Birthday.


HAPPY BIRTHDAY EJ                                                            Virginia Gow 31/12/12

Little girl, with golden curls,
Dances in a fairy gown.
Lime green net with watermelon trim
Three drive up the airy mountain
All the way from Sydney Town.

Aunty Gin lives on the top,
With an open view of the sky.
Rustic cabin, in a tangled garden,
Painting portraits of humble pie.

James and Jody, loving parents
Together share a caring glow
For this superb child,
So natural and smiling.
‘I’m nearly three, you know!’

Ej climbs upon the stool
Swirling paints in studio
Names all the colours, cleans well her brushes,
Sable hair, the best, ’Oh!’

So, twirl the baton, sing down the sun,
Evie Jean blesses this home, now it’s done!

Sunday, December 23, 2012

SHALLOW NIGHT


SHALLOW NIGHT

A sallow knight came riding in
No whiskers bore him on his chin
No helmet drew upon his head
Nonsense rattled round instead

So tell us, how you came to be
Banished here, in misery.
‘Oh, I am famed’, he replied
‘Up and down the countryside.’

‘I am the most deliberate bore,
All around, I hold the floor,
Never shut my mouth all day,
Though I have but naught to say’.

‘I love the sound of my own voice,
Polite people have no choice.
I have never met DISCERNMENT,
Or the SILENT sweet lament’.

‘Tis a shallow night when I come to call
Be a blessing when I’m not here at all.


Tuesday, December 18, 2012

BURNT TOAST


BURNT TOAST

Would you offer a guest who has traveled far
Burnt toast from yesterday?
If it’s all you have, then this will do.
‘No way,’ I hear you say.

Would you rather offer a sheer delight,   
Creamy buttery bread
Still smelling of baker’s dough?
“Yes, Yes, ‘ you answer low.

All care should then be taken
With a serving for the soul.
Line up the poet’s recipe
In a wabi-sabi bowl.

Each morsel, a sliver of ‘bacon’
Crisp and tender to the ear,
Golden, egg-ripple interplay
Resembles the wandering seer.

Slow cooking, play with one line,
For an hour, a day, or a year.
Unique ideas are a breakfast feast,
Researched and sifted through.

The ego has no place in rhyme.
Who will offer a serving to you?

Thursday, December 13, 2012

THE NEWCOMER


THE NEWCOMER                                                                        Virginia Gow 13/11/12

Slipping out of the folds of sleep
Into a Sunday light of day
The Cousins breakfast where the view is best,
On the covered in verandah, looking west.
Pale clouds scud the yellow sky.
A soft melody wafts through summer air.
Hushed tones implore the guests to eat
And after this, a special treat,
To meet and greet
Our host’s newest ‘friend’!
We had seen the signs upon arrival the day before.
The house so neat and clean; the table spread,
But where was this hidden beauty?
Immaculate in her household duty.
‘Wait till it’s Sunday mid-morning.
All will be revealed’ our host implored.
When wining and dining late last night,
The Cousins’ talk did ebb and flow
Round secret family tales of old,
Never revealed till now.
And one grew cold went to bed
To rest her head, with thoughts unsaid.
Full of memories of youth ablaze
When glory reigned and dreams were true
And wild was the summer ride.
When possibilities were endless
Energy flowed sweet on the incoming tide.
Oh truth to tell, the charming faces of the cousins
Still render a second glance.
Still cause a heart to beat
And love to prance and dance.
The host delights in his secret beau!
Taking her to Sydney next week.
He wishes to introduce her to his friends
But now!
Please stand around the dining room,
And watch as she glides into view.
Smooth and sleek in her silver dress
Her laser eyes explore us,
She dances over the carpet pile,
Amazing all with her precision turns
She scans under the table and kisses all our feet
All hidden specks are banished
While we stare in disbelief.
She is a marvel to behold
Her name is NEATO, we are told.
‘No need have I now for a wife’,
 Our host imparts,
“Neato is with me for the rest of my life.’


TO PLAY OR NOT TO PLAY



TO PLAY OR NOT TO PLAY                                                            Virginia Gow   24/10/12
The World is round and so is a golf ball. Gin had only played one game of golf at Mittagong when she was twenty two. She and a friend had a holiday with Aunty Eva, who lived alone in an old, one-bedroom timber house in the bush near Mittagong. For some reason Gin and her friend went to play golf. The friend played well. Gin scored one hundred and twenty seven on a nine-hole course and didn’t count the shots she missed. She figured golf was not quite her game.
When she contacted a friend forty-four years later to say that she wanted to come to a Harriers’ Golf Day, he was delighted. The Harriers’ met once a year at Parramatta Golf Course to play eighteen holes, then they lunched and caught up on “how you doing this year!’ over a few schooners of tap beer.
Peter McBride organized the day, Michael Price donated the prizes, and Gin was to present the two trophies, the “Rod Gow” trophy for men, in honour of her brother who passed on in 1971 and the “Jimmy Melville” trophy for women, in honour of Jim who passed away a few years ago.
A six am start down the airy mountain on an express train kept her pace with the sunrise. She was excited about meeting up with people that she had hung out with in her teens. Ron Price picked her up from Westmead Railway Station in his super white Ute.
Ron handed his camera to Gin and she didn’t actually have to play. Her job was to take photographs, walk and talk to folk, which suited her just fine. Twelve people played that day, Gin ambled around snapping swings and dings and balls in holes. A family of little wild wood ducks sauntered over the green and she snapped them, too. A golf ball collided with her leg, teaching her to pay attention to “fore”, in future.
Built in 1799, Old Government House at Parramatta is the oldest public residence in Australia.  For seven decades the first ten Governors resided there. The house nestled in two hundred acres of parkland. From this country residence, laws were made, rebellions put down, taxes were levied, and coups were enacted. This was the legacy of Parramatta Park.
In 1902 Parramatta Golf Course came into being as part of Parramatta Park. It is the second oldest golf course in New South Wales.
Nowadays, a green keeper lives in peace and comfort in the old gatehouse with the odd golf ball striking his roof. Trent, the superintendant, explained to Gin that golf courses are filtering systems preserving the green nature corridors for future generations. He maintained the pond so now wild wood ducks, magpies, owls, bush turkeys and black cockatoos nest and shelter within the boundaries of the course.
Gin talked cricket with the locals at coffee break and learned of famous Aussie cricketers making millions in India. One bloke’s uncle said that his nephew could not walk down an Indian street without being mobbed, like a Bollywood star.
Lunch cooked by Di was a steak sandwich washed down by a schooner of cold beer. Now there was time to talk and tell tales of old, remember old mates, tally the score-sheets and hand out the prizes. Everyone received a gift. Gin presented the cups, handed over the camera and declared that next year she WOULD play golf. The world is round and so is a golf ball, so if she can manage to stay upright on the earth, she may learn to hit a ball before next year. AND she was given the correct Harriers’ golf gear! What a great day!
                             

ACROSS THE NULLARBOR PLAIN BY TRAIN


Across The Nullarbor Plain By Train.                                    Virginia Gow 03/12/12
‘Take a good book with you’, advises the travel agent. ‘ There’s an empty, barren land for you to cross and three night’s train traveling to do.’  Having never left the Northern Beaches, this travel agent knows all about ‘a good book’. Trained in the right sales pitch to traveling folk of a suitable age, her eyes gaze at the seniors’ card and glaze over as if she could already picture Ginny in the Red Class. Ginny, blanked out for the entire journey, with the latest ‘Sisterhood of the Rose’ thriller. Dinner gong calling cattle to the canteen would enable the senior traveler to download money on a pie with peas, washed down by a tea-bagged mug. ’Yes, take a good book, if you don’t wish to fly’, she smiles.
Truth is Ginny has no intention of settling for the Red Class on the grand old train, ‘The Indian Pacific’. She intends to travel in the Gold Class, sleeping in a cabin by herself, as the train slips through the silky night. This would give dreams a chance to be vivid and carefree. Sharing a cabin with other folk would fog her memory. A journey like this she would do only once in her life. Far from imagining the land as empty, she envisages it as full.
Armed with her best rag paper pad and brilliant watercolors, she intends to paint an endless sky with red dust swirling around bluebush and saltbush plants.  She is aware that these humble bushes have a fragile existence. Drought-resistant and salt-tolerant, they cling to the land of the Nullarbor Plain.
Three meals a day provides one with ample sustenance. Gold Class passengers eat in a discrete dining car. The tables have white tablecloths with crisp, white napkins. Fine bone china accompanies dishes of a creditable reputation, whilst wine and water flank the dinner courses, dancing in their crystal glasses. The silver service encourages all to enjoy the repast and guests chatter and share their life histories as the memory of Daisy Bates hovers alongside the carriages.
Daisy Bates, who tempted fate and wrote about Aboriginals eating their babies, lived in a tent for 20 years beside these railway tracks. She lived her life on the edge of truth and became a legend with fame and glory.
Fields of wattle wave passengers onward and ochre canyons leap out of the way of the serpent’s breath.  The train is silver sleek rattling through towns like Broken Hill and Adelaide. Passing through open woodlands of Myall acacias, it moves forward to limestone ground. This is the largest limestone sedimentary landscape in the world. A gigantic plain, 200,000 square metres of the same rocks that built the great pyramids, it fills the windows of the carriages with its presence. Under the ground, the caves yet unexplored, tempt the miner with promises of riches.  The town of Cook, unadulterated by suburban bliss, gives passengers an opportunity to stretch their legs. There’s a sign. It beckons, ‘If you’re crook, come to Cook. Population five.’ In the shadow of an ancient gum, two corrugated iron lock ups stand tall. ‘Don’t play up on the train or you may end up in one of these, ready cooked, to be taken on to Kalgoolie’, laughs the shop owner’s wife.
Kalgoolie is a gold-mining town of fabled riches. Here barmaids wear little and show off their breasts.   ‘Lillie Langtrees’ hosts a famous brothel tour and one of the train party goes missing for an hour, or more.
It is the quality of passengers that gather in the saloon bar that makes this journey so interesting. Ginny meets an ancient safari guide who hails from Kenya ‘Before the war’, of course. Her clothes are yellowed from a different age, and her old bones won’t mount a horse so she rides this train instead. She remembers tales of another time when she was young and the world was ripe and rich for the taking and she hunted lion, deer and elephant.
Two mature French women travel with a beautiful daughter, a photographer of bike rallies and car events. They come from Leon.‘ This is our forth time on this train’, they explain with secret smiles. ‘Why don’t you speak French?’ they ask. Are they hunting for Aussie males?  Watch as they make passes at the men who ride on the Golden Line, with or without their spouses.  Yes, watch and study the parlor games.
There are conversations where people open up their pasts and honesty wears its hat.  One camera man goes to Perth to film “Cloud Street’ and shares a script with Ginny. Another brings out his guitar and plays a tune. An Irishman sings with glee.
Two older sisters tell of drought and how they ‘left the land’ but still have sufficient investments to travel in style. They have been to the North Pole, a momentous trip across pack ice with husky dogs. Caught a ship to the South Pole, too, just to compare the lights shimmering in the frosty nights. They sit and they hold hands. Ginny paints for them a shimmering scene as days and nights pass by. Their time is short, but they don’t mind, one tells her with a sigh.
A couple speaks of how they have come from Perth, played golf on the longest golf club in the world, across the Nullarbor Plain. This golf course links outback towns together along the Eyre Highway. Now they’re left their friends and are traveling back with their green uniforms and a Diploma of Golf.
Who needs a good book when traveling with people who are happy to share their tales?  Real life pages of mystery are listened to avidly. All of these folk have dreams and fantasies. They write in Ginny’s book and message her ‘Enjoy your time!’
“And why do you travel on this train’, one enquires thoughtfully.
Ginny answers, ‘I’m going to Perth for a party! An odd thing to do, it’s true. A special treat for a cousin, sweet, and it’s to be held in a zoo.’

DEATH RITES


DEATH RITES
Fed by clean, clear rivers, the Aral Sea was the forth-largest sea in the world.
Its banks were home to fisher folk for centuries.
Kazak and Uzbek music lulled its waves to sleep.
T’was the Tsar of Russia who annexed the land and brought powerful ships to sail on its waters. 
The seaports were full of bathers and sailors.
Fish from these waters fed on rich sea grasses and the catch was plentiful.
People grew healthy and strong from eating such tasty fish.
A factory was built upon the banks and 600 people canned fish and shipped it out to the global market.
Soviet Union came to power and built secret biological experimental bases on the islands.
Greed caused the government to order the diversion of the two main rivers whose flow fed the sea daily.
Cotton, wheat and rice were to be planted along irrigation ditches and now the waters fed the hungry plants to grow a harvest for world market.
Someone cried, ‘the sea will die.’ But no one cared enough.
So now, here is this sea, less than one tenth of its size, being choked by desert sand. There is no sea grass on its bed. No fish to feed the people. Because the cotton farmers spray chemicals for quick growth, this poison seeps into the waters. Babies are born with deformities. Those who drink from the sea develop cancer. No fish, no factory, no people. Aral Sea is a dying, shrunken relic.
Sound familiar? Cubbie Station is at the headwaters of the Murray Darling River system. It has been bought by foreign investment.
Most of the farms around Wagga Wagga have been bought by foreign investment for mega farms
Who will save our water systems? All our governments and Councils allow our land to be sold. “Foreign investment is great,” they tell us. When it’s too late, the death rites will echo down history corridors, and we will wonder why we stood by and did nothing.

VIETNAMESE COFFEE


VIETNAMESE COFFEE                                                            Virginia Gow   10/12/12

This
Misty morning
Black crow a’calling
Cherry tree’s drooping branches
Tis  a somber Spring morning.
Time
For cake.
Warm oven, a’bake.
‘Grandma’ smell through home
Puff overflow white paper patty.
Place
Tiny tin
Over kitchen mug.
Black, strong dripping coffee
Seeps warmly, gently flowing down.
Why 
Are you
So happy now?
Food for the soul!
Softly sounds the meditation melody.
Remember
Distant land.
Vietnamese coffee cup
Purchased at discrete market
Sit, sipping fluid, whilst people
Swirl around, slowly moving through time.

A PARTY OF STRANGERS


A COMPANY OF STRANGERS                                                Virginia Gow 11/12/12
As the capital city of Vietnam, Hanoi is imbibed with elegance and refinement. It is peopled by a hard working folk who offer conversation to strangers as a matter of politeness. This city has a life span of one thousand years already and has managed to hold on to its character despite the tragedies of its struggle for survival.
Having freed itself from China, it was ruled by royal dynasties until the French conquest, which allowed this foreign power to rape and pillage the land and its people for over 100 years.  After a draining Vietnamese War, Hanoi emerges, a swan gliding on the rivers of time. To say that its people have suffered in their bid to govern themselves would be feeble. One only has to visit the ‘Hanoi Hilton’, a notorious prison now a museum, to weep at the inhumanity of mankind and admire the resilience of this race.    
Strangers come to visit this city. They are housed in an expensive hotel. Over dinner, Ginny absorbs the fact that this group span four continents, are aged between three and eighty, have different ethics and maintain different cultural beliefs.
A party of six Americans, grandparents, son and daughter-in-law and a girl aged five and a boy aged three are meeting up in Southeast Asia for a holiday. The grandparents hail from Texas, own cattle farms, support Bush and are Christians. Their son is a fighter pilot stationed in South Korea, responsible for bombing raids into Afghanistan.  This trip is their family time together. They want to blend in with a company of strangers. Both men are over six feet and stride with military precision. Beacons to be seen for miles in downtown Hanoi, they feel less conspicuous in a group and are generous with their conversation and money. Their wives are sweet and attentive. The two children are delightful.
From Israel there are two Romanian Jews. The husband is in charge of airport security at Tel Aviv, the wife is a chemical engineer and suffers from anxiety. This trip is her birthday celebration. Also she wishes to distract herself from the fact that their children have been called up to fight in the Lebanon’s war.  Her gold is as flamboyant as her hair is red. Why anyone would wish to call attention to wealth whilst traveling through an impoverished nation is beyond Ginny.
The guide is eighty and has been specially chosen to lead the group. He introduces himself as Kar, quietly, simply and he stands at the edge of the foyer. His eyes are cast down. A small elderly man, he has agreed to be the guide for this unusual blend of tourists. Fortunately, there are not many in this group.
Two from Australia are schoolteachers from a hospital school traveling under a study grant. Their views would be of a liberal nature, philosophically Zen Buddhist. They are independent women. Ginny, the younger, takes the lead and goes forward addressing the guide as MR. KAR. This sets up precedence and all follow suit and likewise show their respect. Now that the lead is established, MR KAR smiles and bows to them all. With a springy turn, he leads them off to the awaiting mini-van, ready to take them adventuring. Time for good learning!

BURNT TOAST


BURNT TOAST
Would you offer a guest who has traveled far
Burnt toast from yesterday?
If it’s all you have, then this will do.
‘No way,’ I hear you say.
 Would you rather offer a sheer delight,   
Creamy buttery bread
Still smelling of baker’s dough?
“Yes, Yes, ‘ you answer low.
All care should then be taken
With a serving for the soul.
Line up the poet’s recipe
In a wabi-sabi bowl.
Each morsel, a sliver of ‘bacon’
Crisp and tender to the ear,
Golden, egg-ripple interplay
Resembles the wandering seer.
Slow cooking, play with one line,
For an hour, a day, or a year.
Unique ideas are a breakfast feast,
Researched and sifted through.
The ego has no place in rhyme.
Who will offer a serving to you?