On Hammock Hill
This is my devotion, then: to walk sometimes
with the dog through the sclerophyll
Cathedral of the morning. To let myself
Off my lead and follow a half-made track,
thinking a dilapidated liturgy,
Through bracken fern and native raspberry, three kinds
Of gum and a hundred kinds of weed,
toward nowhere in particular.
For the dog, the trail is a cartography
of smells, its landmarks
Excrement and rabbit holes and old impressions
Left in mud. For me, it’s a way
I can’t find, most times, to lose
My way among brown butterflies; to fall out of the frantic schedules of the shallow
Hours that count down most of one’s time on earth. The forest path
is a labyrinth of bells and several local species
Of solitude. I go out daily, hoping for the rest of me,
the otherness in all of us; I come back with dew
Drenched boots. And a weary dog. Inside my life – is it like this for you? –
I’m the blowfly that got inside the house: open two windows
And watch it beat itself up
against every way it can’t get out, until
It can’t remember why it wanted to. This is my devotion, then: to walk
with the dog among frogsong and falling bark:
see if I can’t lose myself for the trees.