'South Head, a Wild Surmise' (poem) written by Stephen Edgar

Climbing the stairway from the beach,

You step past antique cannon onto a lawn

With benches and a scattering of wrens.

Your eyes are drawn 

Across, around the harbour, scanning each

Headland and cove that bends

The haze-bedazzled shoreline, till they reach,


Way off, those glassy towers, the office blocks,

An appiration out of science fiction,

As though the city that you travelled through

Were a prediction,

Not here and now, a temporal paradox

Put up to baffle you

Then you proceed, up steps cut in the rocks,


Skirting the pilot's cottage, to South Head,

The empty gun emplacements, the lighthouse,

The cliff face dropping sheer into the sea,

With its plosive douse

Of surge and foam, the wind's unlimited

Onrush of nullity.

Against which you are braced to stand and tread.


If you should lean and reach out into it,

Would that arm too be made of emptiness?

On the way back you come to that bank of lawn

The wrens possess.

This time you watch them as they skitter and flit,

Minutely feeding on 

Skerricks around the bench on which you sit.


So used to people are they that they treat

Their passing forms as though they were not there,

The tiny flying insects you can't see

Their only care,

As they flutter and pounce around your stationed feet

So unconcertedly.

Indeed, what is the limit of their petite


And searching eyes? The harbour you survey,

Those distant towers that the sun ignites,

The coloured yachts, may be the merest blur

Beyond their sight's

Brief focus, which dissolves into the day,

Like the stretched arm you were

Imagining the wind might make away.

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