Judith Wright - For New England lyrics

Published

0 140 0

Judith Wright - For New England lyrics

Your trees, the homesick and the swarthy native, blow all one way to me, this southern weather that smells of early snow: And I remember The house closed in with sycamore and chestnut fighting the foreign wind. Here I will stay, she said: be done with the black north, the harsh horizon rimmed with drought. – Planted the island there and drew it round her. Therefore I find in me the double tree. And therefore I, deserted on the wharves, have watched the ships fan out their webs of streamers (thinking of how the lookout at the heads leaned out towards the dubious rims of sea to find a sail blown over like a message you are not forgotten), or followed through the taproot of the poplar … But look, oh look, the Gothic tree's on fire with blown galahs, and fuming with wild wings. The hard inquiring wind strikes to the bone and whines division. Many roads meet here in me, the traveller and the ways I travel. All the hills' gathered waters feed my seas who am the swimmer and the mountain river; and the long slopes' concurrence is my flesh who am the gazer and the land I stare on; and dogwood blooms within my winter blood, and orchards fruit in me and need no season. But sullenly the jealous bones recall what other earth is shaped and hoarded in them. Where's home, Ulysses? Cuckolded by lewd time he never found again the girls he sailed from, but at his fireside met the islands waiting and died there, twice a stranger. Wind, blow through me till the nostalgic candles of laburnum fuse with the dogwood in a single flame to touch alight these sapless memories. Then will my land turn sweetly from the plough and all my pastures rise as green as spring.