Once again thank you to Susi, >>https://iwriteher.com/2023/04/26/reflections-revelations-has-published/ for selecting my poems in her outstanding Anthology, “Reflections and Revelations, The Short of It, Vol 2” … Today I am presenting the second page (33) of my pieces from her fascinating Collection of Short poems and prose … which I have scanned directly from copy of the anthology and attached below … The paperback version is available on Amazon.com NOW!! If you’re interested in getting a copy, pleaseCLICK THIS LINK!
Today’s ‘Throwback Friday’ poem is from my remembrance week a year ago
“Below; I have formed one poem out of four Senryu that I wrote this morning, and I have many fractured thoughts within my soul, a decade after Carole’s passing on May 3rd 2012 at 1.15pm …“
Today’s Fragments (Revised) (A four Senryu poem)
I am who I am I can’t be another man She’s my hologram
I sat beside her Next to yesterday’s campfire Embers in the wind
A red flame flickers Above her celestial star My eternal light
On my island home Sea mist falls across my arms Completion awaits
A special poem I wrote, after I’d taken my Lady to hospital for the last time, on the day of her 65th birthday, eleven years ago. Hello Carole, and I wonder if you still wonder that I wonder, about wandering on your celestial star…….
The view from Mona’s ‘underground enterance’, across the Derwent River with Mt Wellingtonin the background … the first item I saw, a fascinating ‘waterfall and light’ display.
A display that suited my imagination.
A Belgium artist’s vast array of whirring tubes and bags mimic the workings of the human digestive system. The apparatus is fed food and produces poo.
I was ‘roped’ into the ‘white library’
Displays that were interesting for me
A painting for ‘Frankie’ … and appropriately ‘Autumn’ leaves
All the installations and artwork were intriguing and open to your own interpretation
We had spent 4 hours at the Museum and was nearly 4.00PM and as clouds settled over Mt Wellington, it was time for us to leave and catch our Flight back to Melbourne
“Goodbye to beautiful Tasmania” and I hope you all enjoyed the tour as much as we did …
Today was another important part of our trip to Tasmania, when we went to the Port Arthur Historic Site, the location of the infamous Port Arthur convict Penitentiary, where our great great grandfather spent 14 years of his life, after which, he moved to the Northwest coast area of Tasmania, where he married and raised the first “Steven” family of Australians in the 1850’s …
At entrance of the historic site… and firstly we went on a cruise around Carnarvon Bay leaving from Mason Cove
The cruise crew, Terri, Maureen, Lee, Jeff, and Nola … Mason Cove and the Penitentiary
The grim looking Penitentiary building
Reading some of the stark history and the bleakness of the 4-storer building
The cells were only 4’ wide ….
The Penitentiary was devastated by fire in 1897 leaving only the masonry walls and barred windows … the exercise yard
The penal colony covered a huge area … whoops … “we are behind bars”
Maureen and Nola up above the Guard Tower
That concludes a nostalgic look into the often unmentioned part of our family’s intriguing history