Tuesday, April 8, 2014

But can you match our history, Bondi & Manly?

 



 
Extract  -  North Head - Guardian of our Harbour                 
from 'Balmoral Picnic'

"You've stood guard against the vagaries
of an ocean, heaving fitfully
between your sandstone headlands.

With South Head, you define and defend
the entrance to our harbour.


 Ideally placed, your timeless view
leads the eye and imagination
from our harbour to the open sea.
In between, Middle Head
still
networks our defence.

.....
You witnessed the DNA of Colonisation;
Through your great gateway
you saw
all the ships
that passed through,
voyaging to the distant world and back.


1788…
From Middle Head, the journals tell,
natives pointed Hunter’s party
 to the ideal place to land;
It was about Balmoral that Bradley wrote,

"These people mixed with ours and all hands danced together."

1788 …

Sydney,  a container for those condemned
"For the term of their natural lives".
L
eg-irons and lash
– conditional pardons;
their labour  advanced and
developed  a new colony.

1791…
Came the rough and bearded whalemen
In ships  from the southern seas’…
‘We saw sperm whales in great plenty!’

It could be said, ‘The colony rode
to wealth on the whale’s back.’


1801…
“The foe – They come! They come!”
Imperial rivalries and wars
Brought invasion scares,
 arcs of fire, fortifications;
Your  cliffs  became ‘Fortress Sydney’.

1878
Following settlement of foreshores;
 you heard current land-owners’ protestations
on repossession of these shores;
to be dedicated as Public Reserve
 to us all -  for eternity.
.....
1890’s…
Streeton and Roberts,
“pulled through the lazy green water
 and lunched in the shade and in the open air”,

to join their fellow artists under canvas-
in camps set up by Hopkins and Ashton.
‘Til matrimony claimed their souls.'

.....
1862
 
Sydney ferries, on your watch
conveyed picnickers and excursionists

in their hundreds,  to Balmoral Gardens
Men in suits and tall hats,  women in
 crinolines with parasols overhead;


‘Refreshments
, dancing saloon, boarded floor
with splendid band engaged.’

 But larrikin London costers in pearly coats
 became  ‘A blot upon the healthful
enjoyment of the picnic’.
1912
Sea and sand between toes  represented  freedom …
then  a century of repressive restrictions
until modesty maintenance moved on
to,  Shall be clad from neck to knee
and the victory of all day surfing.




1922…
The Evening News reported,
The old place of quiet waters and rustic gums
is  gone forever.  The trams did it. 
Not a square inch of sand  untrampled -
‘Balmoral is alive!’


1923 - 1950
Order of the Star of the East Amphitheatre  
built to view the returning  Christ
walking on the waters through your rugged  cliffs;
Replaced by a red brick citadel.
Suburbanisation had conquered all’        .....

1929 - 1932
 ‘The Great Depression’ seized the world.
An ‘economic ogre’ crippled industry,
threw workers to the streets -
and having vent its worst fury,
lingered in the shadows until WW2.


Hardship endured;  depression employment
yielded   Sydney Harbour Bridge -
Balmoral beautification scheme; 
 Rotunda, Bathers Pavilion, Promenade.
Concrete mad’, they all said.

.....
1945…
Gaff-rigged ketch, Kathleen Gillett’,
first of many to begin the race
past your cliffs, bound for Hobart.
Sailing and water sports became the
forefront of post-war revival.

.....
2014 TO ETERNITY
Children play in rockpools;
early morning swimmers brave the chill;
we all enjoy the picnic;
Your rocky timeless heights stand firm  
 eternally   -   as   guardians to us all.
Claire Mitchell 2013
'Balmoral Picnic' is scheduled to be released as an E-book in Spring.