| |  Poetry: September 01, 2010 Issue [#3945]  | 
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  This week: Poetry of Dorothea MackellerEdited by: Stormy Lady   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
 7. Removal instructions
 
 
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 | This is poetry from the minds and the hearts of poets on Writing.Com. The poems I am going to be exposing throughout this newsletter are ones that I have found to be, very visual, mood setting and uniquely done. Stormy Lady  | 
 
 
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 | Burning Off by Dorothea Mackeller
 
 They're burning off at the Rampadells,
 The tawny flames uprise,
 With greedy licking around the trees;
 The fierce breath sears our eyes.
 
 From cores already grown furnace-hot -
 The logs are well alight!
 We fling more wood where the flameless heart
 Is throbbing red and white.
 
 The fire bites deep in that beating heart,
 The creamy smoke-wreaths ooze
 From cracks and knot-holes along the trunk
 To melt in greys and blues.
 
 The young horned moon has gone from the sky,
 And night has settled down;
 A red glare shows from the Rampadells,
 Grim as a burning town.
 
 Full seven fathoms above the rest
 A tree stands, great and old,
 A red-hot column whence fly the sparks,
 One ceaseless shower of gold.
 
 All hail the king of the fire before
 He sway and crack and crash
 To earth - for surely tomorrow's sun
 Will see him white fine ash.
 
 The king in his robe of falling stars,
 No trace shall leave behind,
 And where he stood with his silent court,
 The wheat shall bow to the wind.
 
 In a Southern Garden
 by Dorothea Mackeller
 
 When the tall bamboos are clicking to the restless little breeze,
 And bats begin their jerky skimming flight,
 And the creamy scented blossoms of the dark pittosporum trees,
 Grow sweeter with the coming of the night.
 
 And the harbour in the distance lies beneath a purple pall,
 And nearer, at the garden's lowest fringe,
 Loud the water soughs and gurgles 'mid the rocks below the wall,
 Dark-heaving, with a dim uncanny tinge
 
 Of a green as pale as beryls, like the strange faint-coloured flame
 That burns around the Women of the Sea:
 And the strip of sky to westward which the camphorlaurels frame,
 Has turned to ash-of-rose and ivory-
 
 And a chorus rises valiantly from where the crickets hide,
 Close-shaded by the balsams drooping down-
 It is evening in a garden by the kindly water-side,
 A garden near the lights of Sydney town!
 
 Dorothea Mackeller was born July 1st 1885, in Sydney, Australia. She was the only daughter of Doctor Charles and his wife Marion. Dorothea and had three brothers, two older one younger. Her family well established in their community and they sent her to private school for her education. Dorothea went onto college at the University of Sydney. She became fluent in many laguages and travelled often travelled with her father. Dorothea wrote the poem My Country at nineteen years old. This poem quickly made Dorothea Mackellar a well known poet in Australia.
 
 As a young adult Dorothea accompanied her father as a translator. When she was at home she helped her mother out with keeping the household affairs in line. Dorothea had a great since of family obligations. Dorothea never married though it is said that she had many romances. Dorothea's anthology Closed Doors was published in 1911. Followed by her second anthology The Witch Maid published in 1914. Dream Harbor  was published in 1923 and Fancy Dress was published three years later in 1926.
 
 Dorothea spent the last years of her life at at St. Helenie Hospital at Paddington. In 1968 at the age eighty-two Dorothea died after being ill for an extend period of time.
 
 The Open Sea
 by Dorothea Mackeller
 
 From my window I can see,
 Where the sandhills dip,
 One far glimpse of open sea.
 Just a slender slip
 Curving like a crescent moon-
 Yet a greater prize
 Than the harbour garden-fair
 Spread beneath my eyes.
 
 Just below me swings the bay,
 Sings a sunny tune,
 But my heart is far away
 Out beyond the dune;
 Clearer far the sea-gulls' cry
 And the breakers' roar,
 Than the little waves beneath
 Lapping on the shore.
 
 For that strip of sapphire sea
 Set against the sky
 Far horizons means to me-
 And the ships go by
 Framed between the empty sky
 And the yellow sands,
 While my freed thoughts follow them
 Out to other lands.
 
 All its changes who can tell?
 I have seen it shine
 Like a jewel polished well,
 Hard and clear and fine;
 Then soft lilac-and again
 On another day
 Glimpsed it through a veil of rain,
 Shifting, drifting grey.
 
 When the livid waters flee,
 Flinching from the storm,
 From my window I can see,
 Standing safe and warm,
 How the white foam tosses high
 On the naked shore,
 And the breakers' thunder grows
 To a battle-roar...
 
 Far and far I look-Ten miles?
 No, for yesterday
 Sure I saw the Blessed Isles
 Twenty worlds away.
 My blue moon of open sea,
 Is it little worth?
 At the least it gives to me
 Keys of all the earth
 
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
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 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 First Place:
 
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 Time Changes Views
 
 Like sun and shadows
 memories mount the trails
 through forest green,
 and wander past the
 crystal lakes
 time has rendered
 bluer than blue.
 
 A remembrance of you
 on rocky mountaintop
 high above the world below,
 so brave and strong;
 your image
 time has rendered
 bluer than blue.
 
 
 
 Second Place:
 
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 #1700887 by Not Available.
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 Broccoli and mashed potatoes,
 Gravy steaming in a bowl,
 Roasted beef, peas, sliced tomatoes
 Stuffing, carrots, buttered rolls.
 
 Yucky, icky, gross, atrocious!
 Grandma makes such awful stuff.
 That corn mush there looks half-ferocious.
 I haven't tried but I've had enough!
 
 But Grandpa smiles a knowing smile,
 And places food upon his plate.
 He shapes potatoes into a pile,
 And sticks broccoli around the base.
 
 Then suddenly I see the landscape:
 A mountaintop and forest trail!
 I quickly put mine in the same shape,
 Add rocky peas for more detail.
 
 A shadow creeps upon his mountain,
 "VOLCANO!" Grandpa yells with glee.
 As gravy drips down like a fountain,
 Roast beef becomes brown debris.
 
 We both dig into mountain peaks,
 And drink down orange juice lakes galore.
 There's crystal carrots in my cheeks.
 "Hey Grandpa, can I have some more?"
 
 
 Third Place::
 
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 I will never see the forest like you
 with that imaginative twist
 like your eyes doing acrobatic spins
 to shape the world into a magical place.
 
 When you say you see crystals
 falling from a blue palette
 descending to an array of upturned trellises
 all I see is rain falling in the forest.
 
 When you see a dangerous rocky quest
 to the snow-drizzled mountaintop
 where the air is almost too thin to breathe
 all I see is a trail up a hill.
 
 When you say you hear the music of the wild
 played by silent ghosts that oversee us
 and never speak a work but strident notes
 all I hear is the plentiful evening birds.
 
 When you say you see a lake strewn in shadows
 and silvery net of light cast upon it
 to protect the superficial currents
 all I see is the moon reflected in the water.
 
 When you say you see the glimmer of perseverance in my eyes
 and the gentle graze of wind in my touch
 and the silent rumbling of a tropical storm in my laughter
 all I see is how much I love you.
 
 I will never see the forest like you do
 with that imaginative twist
 But I see you in every mystic light possible
 and begin to understand the world a little more.
 
 
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