Archive for April, 2010

Cabo Frio, Namibia – A Poem

Here is another poem for your reading pleasure. It is called “Cabo Frio, Namibia.”

During the Age of Exploration, Portuguese Navigators’ reports of the exploration of the African coast were closely guarded state secrets, to keep the information out of the hands of other European powers. In the Lisbon earthquake in 1755, the repository of all those reports, the Casa da India, collapsed and burned, so destroying all those documents. A couple of years ago, I wrote a series of poems to try to re-create them by writing poems about how various places on the African coast might have got their Portuguese names.

This is one of the poems…

Cabo Frio, Namibia
© Garth Dutton 2010

The Portuguese Navigators
reached Cabo Frio, (Cold Cape),
where the full force of
the icy Benguela Current
sweeps up from the south
and begins to merge
with tropical seas,
so confirming to the Navigators
that the world was round.

Reaching that Cape
may have been
the most important event
in maritime history,
for it marked
the beginning of the end
of all sailors’ greatest fear,
namely the fear of
sailing off the edge of the world…
A fear that had paralysed
open ocean navigation
for millennia.

This is possibly
why Columbus knew it was safe
to cross the Atlantic.

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Friday, April 16th, 2010 Poetry No Comments

Mitsubishi’s Contribution To Mathematics – A Poem

Mitsubishi’s Contribution To Mathematics
© Garth Dutton, 2004

In World War Two
the Zero became a plane.
In fact, one of the finest fighter planes
ever built.

So since then
a zero isn’t nothing
anymore.

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Thursday, April 15th, 2010 Poetry No Comments

Suburbia Pigeons – A Poem

Suburbia Pigeons
© Garth Dutton, 2007

These birds
have adapted beautifully
to life in Adelaide’s suburbs.
Originally Burmese doves,
they came from the hot wet climate
of a tropical rain forest.

Here they have adapted
to a cool wet winter
and a long hot dry summer.
There would not have been
one item of food from
their original rain forest home
available here.

They had to find a new year-round diet
from scratch, and have done so.
In some Adelaide suburbs,
native topknot pigeons and suburbia pigeons
have separate territories.

In other suburbs,
they share backyards and parks.
And I am sure they now
have no ‘racial memory’
of their original rain forest home.

They are in Adelaide to stay.

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Sunday, April 11th, 2010 Environment, Poetry No Comments