Artwork: Jessica McCallum © 2000
Although actually written at university and included in my chapbook ‘Return of Rainbows’, this poem was first published in ‘Peace & Freedom’ Magazine, in London, 2001 with my daughter’s artwork.
Carnaby’s Black Cockatoos are a highly endangered species of native birds only found in Western Australia. Because of us, these noisy birds who possibly mate for life and can live 40 – 50 years, are in great danger.
Later the poem was included in my first book ‘Hidden Capacity ~ a poet’s journey’ published in Cork, Ireland in 2003.
COCKATOO CHORUS
“We’ll meet in the eucalypts down by the lake.
Discussion is needed – you have to partake!”
Black clouds flew from the oval, park and golf club
to raucously weigh down trees out in the scrub.
“Juicy larvae and insects prove harder to find
all the spraying and logging – ground being mined
has taken our homes, our gathering sites.
Together, in numbers we’ll fly up for our rights.”
.
From once sacred ground now suburbs, they flew.
From gum-tree nesting hollows, so precious and few
hundreds gathered early, in loud morning debate –
the Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo parrot’s fate.
Discussed at great length in the eucalypt trees
for young; less food, meant less ability to feed.
“Stop clearing, spraying – playing with our lives!
If we die, what hope have you got, to survive?”
.
Frances Macaulay Forde © 2000







Beautiful poem, Frances.
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Thanks, Robin.
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Very powerful, Frances, Thanks!
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Glad you enjoyed it, Jean.
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[…] you’ve got time, read more about these magnificent Carnaby’s but also, have a look at the best photos I’ve ever seen of them, up close, taken by Grace and […]
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