THE LAST HELLOS

Don’t die, Dad—

but they die.

This last year he was wandery:

took off a new chainsaw blade

and cobbled a spare from bits.

Perhaps if I lay down

my head’ll come better again.

His left shoulder kept rising

higher in his cardigan.

He could see death in a face.

Family used to call him in

to look at sick ones and say.

At his own time, he was told.

The knob found in his head

was duck-egg size. Never hurt.

Two to six months, Cecil.

I’ll be right, he boomed

to his poor sister on the phone.

I’ll do that when I finish dyin.

Don’t die, Cecil.

But they do.

Going for last drives

in the bush, odd massive

board-slotted stumps bony white

in whipstick second growth.

I could chop all day.

I could always cash

a cheque, in Sydney or anywhere.

Any of the shops.

Eating, still at the head

of the table, he now missed

food on his knife side.

Sorry, Dad, but like

have you forgiven your enemies?

Your father and all them?

All his lifetime of hurt.

I must have (grin). I don’t

think about that now.

People can’t say goodbye

any more. They say last hellos.

Going fast, over Christmas,

he’d still stumble out

of his room, where his photos

hang over the other furniture,

and play host to his mourners.

The courage of his bluster,

firm big voice of his confusion.

Two last days in the hospital:

his long forearms were still

red mahogany. His hands

gripped steel frame. I’m dyin.

On the second day:

You’re bustin to talk

but I’m too busy dyin.

Grief ended when he died,

the widower like soldiers who

won’t live life their mates missed.

Good boy, Cecil! No more Bluey dog.

No more cowtime. No more stories.

We’re still using your imagination,

it was stronger than all ours.

Your grave’s got littler

somehow, in the three months.

More pointy as the clay’s shrivelled,

like a stuck zip in a coat.

Your cricket boots are in

the State museum! Odd letters

still come. Two more’s died since you:

Annie, and Stewart. Old Stewart.

On your day there was a good crowd,

family, and people from away.

But of course a lot had gone

to their own funerals first.

Snobs mind us off religion

nowadays, if they can.

Fuck thém. I wish you God.