FIBONACCI POETRY

VIRGINIA GOW

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

HOLIDAY




HOLIDAY
We
Came
Upon
Winter’s sun.
Spied the ocean blue.
Breathed iodine’s salty spraying.
Loving learning calligraphy on verandah space.
Reading, writing, brightly dancing in tuo tuos, sending afternoon shadows onto walls.
Sharing movies about poets and singers, lives and lovers.
Bask in friendship, telling stories.
Deep sleep, lost in dreams.
Moments sweet,
Grateful
For
All.

COLOUR




COLOUR
Red:
Fire
Symbol,
Energy
Flowing through our veins.
Orange: colour of emotion.
Rivers no dam may keep, lest pent up, burst into flood.
Yellow: intelligence, like sunbeams filtering rays of light through a dusty mindscape
Green: sign of unconditional love, nature’s mantle.
Blue: blessed healing, cloak wrapping,
A self-care vision.
And purple?
Wisdom,
The
Way.
 

Friday, March 29, 2013

SHOWER



SHOWER
Soft
As
Bridal
Baby’s breath
Autumn’s watering
Purple pansies pause in wonder
Lifting lilting heads to drizzle honeyed raindrops into vibrant velvet verdant stems
Passionately move in rhythm
With petals glistening
Like jewels
Hidden
In
Stone
Virginia Gow
31/03/13

Thursday, March 28, 2013

DOWNPOUR


DOWNPOUR
Bright
Slim
Lilies
Lighten up
A garden pathway
Where salacious snails munch basil
For early breakfast a hearty healthy herbal treat
Somber charcoal clouds dancing high upon mountaintop bring sweet promise of steady rain
Brittle little black ants skittle amongst leaf litter
Inviting evacuation
Clashing timpani
Embracing
Earth’s
Vein
Virginia Gow
04/03/13

WHITE POPPIES



       
WHITE POPPIES
she
knows
silence
watching  leaves
fall gracefully down
crumbling on the old stone path
finding something like intrinsic beauty in their decay
remembering summery embraces as dancing poppies scent the twilight breezes
patiently listening for the last white crumpled petal to fade and fall as all around wait and anticipate the next regeneration


           
                                                       Virginia Gow
        March 2013

POPPIES



POPPIES
She
Knows
Silence
Watching  leaves
Fall gracefully down
Crumbling on the old stone path
Finding something like intrinsic beauty in their decay
Remembering summery embraces as dancing poppies scent the twilight breezes
Patiently listening for the last white crumpled petal
To fade and fall as all around
Anticipate a
Regener
a
tion
Virginia Gow
                          21/03/13

ROSE



ROSE
In
soft
garden
gently grows
a fragrant yellow
climbing rose keeping company
with daffy dandelions and lusty little lizards
solid dry stone wall keeps safe this majestic flower perfect in her thorny bower
whispering  perfumeries to autumn’s brisk breezes
slowly discards each silk petal
to nestle softly
in the ground
decays
fades
gone

Memory of a fragile essence lingers still.

Virginia Gow
28/03/13

Friday, March 8, 2013

PARADISE


PARADISE                                                                                     Virginia Gow            07/03/13
It is just a glance at a photo in a magazine, that’s all it takes for a memory to be born.
Ginny has been spending time in Bangkok at the Thai House Cooking School, sitting on cement, grinding green paste, yellow paste and red paste that will transform dishes into authentic Thai cuisine. Chopping up vegetables, and learning to cut carrots into flowers and immersing herself in local Thai culture, she feels that it is now time for a rest.
It is not on her list of places to go, but a singular vision from a magazine in a dentist’s room floods her mind. Her imagination calls her to seek out the limestone islands that lie in the Andaman Sea, off the west coast of Thailand. To see the unique beauty of the Phi Phi islands and capture something of their essence in paint is a worthwhile quest.
Travelling by longboat through crystal waters, she arrives at a white sandy beach surrounded by verdant jungle palms.  Locating a teak bungalow high on a hill she moves into heaven. Her gaze slips over the deck to where this alluring sea lies, like ultramarine silk, outside her door. So serene, so soft, so deadly is this water.
Last night at dinner her host told her of the tsunami that swept over his beloved island one year ago and had taken over four thousand lives. He spent three nights in the mountains watching the sea swirl and recede, leaving havoc in its wake. The islands have been off limits to people whilst all damage removed. Her host smiles and welcomes her as one of the first tourists allowed back to his piece of paradise.
 ‘Beauty has a price and so it goes with paradise, one person’s heaven can be a hell and hell can be a heaven. It’s all a question of balance’, he explains. ‘Gaze at this vista and remember to respect its terrifying beauty.’

IONA


IONA                                                                                                Virginia Gow 28/02/13
Who dares to ride this crossing in such foul weather? A lone muffled figure scans the horizon from the pitching deck. Some inner warmth is needed for the Professor as he grips the ferry’s rails. A nip of whisky will warm him.  Lurching across the deck to the seat that straddles the wall, he pulls a flask of single malt from his leather briefcase. As he slowly sips his eyes study the contents of his briefcase and he realizes that something is missing.

Off the western coast of Scotland lies the Isle of Iona.  Famed as the resting place of many kings, it is a hermit’s joy and a Queen’s sorrow. It’s a wee tiny place three miles by one.  What power holds sway over its salty air as it appears to idle in the wind? Mists whisper, ‘The veils of time are thin on Iona as they weave and wander through the awesome light.’ Why does this island draw traveler and scholar from everywhere to its shores? To walk on its hallowed, timeless earth catch a ferry from Oban, traverse Mull, and then another short but rocky ferry ride across the straits to Iona. Around two thousand years ago a few Druids hid on this island to escape Rome’s despairing eyes. They painted blue woad, made from mustard leaves, upon their faces and danced a magic ring upon the earth to sing up the land. Saint Columba and his band of twelve monks rowed from Ireland to Scotland and established the monastic tradition on this island in the Early Middle Ages.

It is high summer morning and a mighty gale blows around the ferry and the storm whips wild waves over the bow. This is a true Scottish tempest straight from a Shakespearean drama. Iona is the final resting place for the real King Macbeth. Travelling here to read tombstones, this renowned scholar hopes to locate the lost crypt of a hidden library. He believes that the crypt holds texts from ancient Greece and Persia, scrolls of Druidic recipes and reference material used by the monks to write the Book of Kells. The Book of Kells is an illuminated manuscript of Gospels in Latin displayed in Trinity College, Dublin and is regarded as a national treasure of Ireland. It has long been rumoured that a chamber of secrets lay beneath the ancient seat of the Stone of Destiny. Records tell that this Stone rested here before it was taken to Edinburgh Castle for the crowning of the Kings of Scotland.
There are many legends about the stone.  The origin of the stone is unknown. Geologists think it came from near Scone but folklore has it that it was brought from Tara in Ireland. Tara is a hill where Irish kings made vows and bards made music sweet upon its famous harp. Some claim the stone was made in Biblical times and brought from the Middle East to Tara in BCE (Before Common Era). Stolen by England and taken to London, England and Scotland fought over the stone for centuries. The Stone of Destiny now resides in Edinburgh Castle, returned by the English to its rightful place.
To balance historicism, he seeks the treasure of knowledge to be found in ancient books. Inside a stone hospital, carved into tombstones there are patterns in code that will unlock the path to the crypt.  He has left his decoder at home, but hopes that his memory is adequate and his quest be fulfilling. 


Friday, February 22, 2013

Travel Tale


THE RUBY RING                                                                        Virginia Gow 19/03/12
No breezes flow in from the Persian Gulf to cool this golden city on the Arabian Peninsula. This ancient town has always been a trading center for East and West. Here is free trade. It is within the Arabian Desert and its fine clean white sand dunes are made from crushed shell and coral. Water is precious and up the wadi, waterholes and gorges fill up then dry up. No oasis here, just the creek that slowly flows into the Persian Gulf.
Mid morning sunlight embraces the ankle length flowing white kandura, the national dress of the men of Dubai. They glide, in twos and threes effortlessly down the ancient roads. Theirs is a serene world, populated by a wealthy community with three quarters of the population brought in from Asia to carry out all manual labour. The indigenous people of Dubai have left their desert wanderings long ago. Theirs is a trading tradition, and as such they now embark on managing Oil, Tourism, Financial Services, Construction and World Class Sporting Events.
Now their minds are taken up with perpetuating their capital flow, and the Constitutional Monarchy that rules is able to manage investments effectively. The Sheikhdom flourishes and it has one of the busiest airports in the world. Ties with Britain assure a prominent position in world affairs.
 Women enjoy the morning shopping at the giant shopping malls. They dress in Abaya, the black over-garment covering most parts of the body. They are aware they have more freedom here than else where in Arab States.  In the Malls are all the latest fashions from a western world eager for their patronage and willing to trade. This is the shopping capital of the Middle East and Bedouin folk music is piped through the modern speakers.
In this playground of wealth people may stay on a man-made island hotel built in the shape of a sail for over $1000 a night.  One has to arrange a visit one day in advance because this is a highly sought after gated community. Passport numbers are listed on entry, names checked off at the guardhouse. Guests are ferried around in golf buggies. Golden pillars surround the foyer. Glass lifts fly effortlessly 200 meters above sea level to a cocktail lounge. Guests dine al fresco on the beach. Lanterns flutter on the hookah shadows as a pipe is passed around scenting the air with apple, cloves and tobacco. A soft-slippered boy from Pakistan delivers spiced desert food to a discreet table by the water’s edge.
Because the town has no sewerage, septic tanks are used to convey waste away to Sewerage Works that convert it to manure. There is a small warning, beware of swimming at Jumeirah Beach. Because some people are not prepared to pay the price for waste disposal, they dump it at night into the sea. It creates a health problem for the beach.
Dubai Creek is the waterway for the town.
The Creek is dredged to enable dhours to anchor. These colourful boats have been coming and going from Far East, China, Sri Lanka and India for centuries.
Nobody bothers the two ladies from overseas as they walk down to Dubai Creek.
Ginny and Yvonne have spent many years traveling the globe together.
They dress in the code of the country and are respectful of its laws. They are leaving the modern world in search of the ancient life. The smuggling trade is brisk in Old Dubai, but they are not interested in that trade. They seek the souks adjacent to the docks. It is rumoured that the gold souk in Deira houses two hundred and fifty gold retail shops, tiny jeweler shops crammed together in a labyrinth. Cross the Creek and enter another world. Here there is no sense of danger, only a sense of the exotic that is the Middle East. Anybody found bothering travellers quietly disappears.
To cross the Creek Ginny and Yvonne are directed to a dhour, the old long boats that make the crossing of the creek possible. There are no safety rails or boarding planks. They jump onto the boat. These simple ferries one rides for a dollar at one’s own risk. The ladies alight at the Spice Souk Station. They are amazed at the aromas that drift from every shop window.  Through the bustling shopping area of market stalls, two enormous wooden gates beckon them into a dazzling endless maze of gold.
Policing is strict and illegal shops spring up and close down in a day. Beware the dodgy seller who only has fools’ gold. Raids are frequent and happen on a daily basis. 
When such a raid happens in a shop they have entered, they quietly exit and watch from a safe distance as police close up shop and everybody drifts away.
Wandering around alleyways of golden shops, displaying necklaces fit for an Empress, they finally come to a small corner shop where seven Abaya clad ladies are enjoying themselves and buying gold.   The two ladies enter, thinking this may be a good sign of fair dealing. One of the blackbirds comes from Canada and states that she comes here every year to buy her gold. She says that she is marrying herself and everyone joins in the party.  
Encouraging the newcomers to partake of this game, everyone is overjoyed when Ginny chooses a ruby ring and a simple gold band. Truth be told, she had left her rings at home, and had realized that it’s far safer to travel with a band of gold then with no ring on her finger.
On the way back, the dhour is stuffed with workers from Asia.  Ginny is aware that they are housed in stable-like conditions, whilst money earned is sent home. They are wearing raggedy clothes.  They are all men. The ladies keep to themselves, but when, on leaving the vessel, Ginny slips and stares at creek-water, a tired, worn out worker saves her, extending his arm. No small feat for a Muslim man.
Ginny enjoyed going up the wadi, camel riding and falconing, being tattooed with henna in a Bedouin camp but for all this she preferred meeting with the blackbirds in the old gold souk and having a ruby ring to remind her of this epic journey.

VERTICAL METROPOLIS



VERTICAL METROPOLIS
Silently slip through
optically controlled gates.
These true monitors
assess every visitor,
record a picture
and, whilst issuing passes,
keep an accurate record.
Identities fixed.
Captured in the 21st
Century Taipei.
The obstacle stands,
steely marvel.
Sleek in brutal defiance
of horizontal
earthbound dreams and promises.
This is the way, come!
In half a minute
a vertical ascension.
Eightynine floors to
unique observatory.
Walking the cloud path.
Looking down through wisps of mist
Far below the city
reveals itself, nestled in 
mountains, rivers, sea.
Rainbow-shifting under glass.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

ARAL SEA


ARAL SEA                                                                                                VGow 03/02/13

Rusty monoliths
Sunken deep in desert dust.
Ancient wooden ships,
Cry out for their ghostly crew.
Empty town Mynak,
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan.
Help! Help my people.
Cry beloved scenery.
Save my dying sea.
Once forth largest in the world.
Fed by two rivers
Now drained for irrigation.
All sweet fish vanish.
Fisher families hungry.
Sea grass fed fishes,
Greed for cotton poisoned sea.
All life extinguished.
Health defects and cancers grow.
Sigh for the distant
line upon the horizon.
Yet still there is hope
From a wealthy vocal few
Global company
Starts to replant sea grasses
Time to repair damage
Ethical use of power
Whilst still there is light.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

LITTLE MOMENTS IN REALITY


LITTLE MOMENTS IN REALITY.
Week One, January 2013
Bright birdcall awakened the day to a promise of rising temperatures. Leaping out of bed, Ginny takes a shower then proceeds to try on three different outfits. Wanting to dress for comfort, she settles for a cool, lemon cotton that she last wore in the jungles of Malaysia. She assures herself that ‘this will do’. Making sure she has keys, sunglasses, hanky and a good book, her timing for the early train is just right. Packing a ladyfinger banana and a juicy orange for the two and a half hour train trip down from the mountains, Ginny heads off for her day in the city.
It’s the first week of a new year and on this special day she meets with her son for news and lunch. As his office is near Central Railway Station, it’s an easy amble along Harris Street, taking time to witness the assortment of people speaking in tongues from all over the planet. Faces marked with ties to far distant lands laugh and banter with significant others in a sunny Sydney way.  A promised heat is just beginning to rise off the pavement.
The grey, modern office block looks strangely deserted as she enters the portal. Riding up to the forth floor, she wonders at the associated businesses housed in its interior. What does the Research of Choice entail? Such an ultra glam office, whisper-thin receptionist with a polite smile allows her eyes to glaze over as Ginny exits the lift.
Ginny takes the hidden staircase to the fifth floor. This staircase is painted in levels of green, blue then ochre. One feels that the space is purifying the mind in a silent meditation as the levels take legs upwards. She ascends to the top and opens the door. 
Inside the atmosphere is serene. Calmness prevails as earnest heads pursue the world of the matrix. She has entered computer heaven. Earnest devotees work wonders in code as rows of computers nestle against a backdrop of skyscrapers. Here they create apps for iphones, games for television shows, and software for building computer wizardry. This is their chosen domain.
Taking timeout from his busy world Morgan and Ginny, bid adieu to the office folk and descend to the world of the street. They walk around until they find a German restaurant where they know the food is tasty and ample. “Succulent pork belly and Weiner Schnitzel washed down with German ale on such a hot day’, says the son with a grin.  The subtle oak paneling and the cool interior remind Ginny of Bavaria and the pine forests of Europe. She likes the warmth of this family place. Her ancient Germanic ancestry delights in the aromas wafting around the pretty pink waitress.
Only now, in the quiet, comfortable room do they speak of careful matters. Their minds connect in agreement and they share their experience of the past year. ‘Now I have a computer game on the shelves’, explains Morgan. ’It’s awesome after six years of work.’
He tells her of his plans for a new home in the inner city. She tells him of her latest painting and her new life in the mountains.
Leaving the cool interior of the German eatery, they come to the heat on Parramatta Road.  Her son suggests, ‘Let’s catch a cab’. The driver comes from Liberia and is impressed by the mother-son pair. He tells them of his mother, and how he rings her every week,’ so that she will not worry about my safety in a strange land.’
Back in the office, Morgan looks up the times for a movie. IMAX at Darling Harbour is showing 'The Hobbit’ and Ginny hasn’t seen it yet. An air-conditioned theatre space sounds like a Sydney opportunity to enjoy this movie fantasy. What an immense look at a Hobbit adventure!
As the day draws to a close, Ginny hops on the light rail that delivers her to Country Central Railway Station just in time to catch the train back home to the top of the mountains. It’s a grand ride because she is entertained by the brilliance of the western sunset and, of course, the good book that is, of course, ’The Hobbit’.