Poetry International Poetry International
Poem

Vivian Smith

Back in Hobart

Back in Hobart

Back in Hobart

My point of reference is this summer slope,
these paddocks stacked like long plates of bread;
and at day’s end, the black loaves of the hills.

I’m back in Hobart after years away
visiting remembered, holy places:
grey boulders in a small suburban creek,
the leopard-spotted plane trees in the square.
The permanence of place does not recede:
the spiritual sky, the unencumbered air.

A cloudless day. Each carted stone in place.
My mother’s house lapses in front of tended trees,
and to the left the mountain changes face . . .

Years ago in Paris I saw a threadbare robe
worn by a priest in 580 AD;
locked behind glass its tarnished red and gold.

Standing by the gate I recall the whole scene now
knowing how things change, and how they hold.
Close

Back in Hobart

My point of reference is this summer slope,
these paddocks stacked like long plates of bread;
and at day’s end, the black loaves of the hills.

I’m back in Hobart after years away
visiting remembered, holy places:
grey boulders in a small suburban creek,
the leopard-spotted plane trees in the square.
The permanence of place does not recede:
the spiritual sky, the unencumbered air.

A cloudless day. Each carted stone in place.
My mother’s house lapses in front of tended trees,
and to the left the mountain changes face . . .

Years ago in Paris I saw a threadbare robe
worn by a priest in 580 AD;
locked behind glass its tarnished red and gold.

Standing by the gate I recall the whole scene now
knowing how things change, and how they hold.

Back in Hobart

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