Kenneth Slessor

1939

South Country

After the whey-faced anonymity

Of river-gums and scribbly-gums and bush,

After the rubbing and the hit of brush,

You come to the South Country

As if the argument of trees were done,

The doubts and quarrelling, the plots and pains,

All ended by these clear and gliding planes

Like an abrupt solution.

And over the flat earth of empty farms

The monstrous continent of air floats back

Coloured with rotting sunlight and the black,

Bruised flesh of thunderstorms.

Air arched, enormous, pounding the bony ridge,

Ditches and hutches, with a drench of light,

So huge, from such infinities of height,

You walk on the sky’s beach

While even the dwindled hills are small and bare,

As if, rebellious, buried, pitiful,

Something below pushed up a knob of skull,

Feeling its way to air.

The Penguin Book of Australian Verse,
J. Thompson, K. Slessor and R.G. Howarth (eds.), Penguin, London, 1958