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  • The Mitchells
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The Mitchells

Les Murray

I am seeing this: two men are sitting on a pole
they have dug a hole for and will, after dinner, raise
I think for wires. Water boils in a prune tin.
Bees hum their shift in unthinning mists of white.

bursaria blossom, under the noon of wattles.
The men eat big meat sandwiches out of a styrofoam
box with a handle. One is overheard saying:
drought that year. Yes. Like trying to farm the road.

The first man, if asked, would say I’m one of the Mitchells.
The other would gaze for a while, dried leaves in his palm,
and looking up, with pain and subtle amusement,

say I’m one of the Mitchells. Of the pair, one has been rich
but never stopped wearing his oil-stained felt hat. Nearly everything
they say is ritual. Sometimes the scene is an avenue.


Les Murray

from The New Oxford Book of Modern Australian Verse (Australia: OUP,1991).

Reproduced by kind permission of the author.

Tags:

Australian poetry farming food habits portraits

About this poem

This poem, representing Australia, is part of The Written World – our collaboration with BBC radio to broadcast a poem from every single nation competing in London 2012.

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