Category: design

  • Sketch of Dawn

    Sketch of Dawn

    Overnight arrival, concealed by dark.
    Uncovered by the scratchy-sketch of dawn.
    Bleak demeanour, drawn as stubborn and stark.
    Bearing the Mistral’s mark; from elsewhere born.
    And so blows the breath of an awkward gust;
    tugs at the rigging with canvas attached;
    agitates, orchestrates a whistling thrust.
    And so throws a whisper; from elsewhere hatched.
    The unknown foreigner, anonymous,
    more shadow than substance; a pirate’s mast
    that bears no scrutiny: Notorious.
    . Best comes the pedigree by light of day.
    . Open to inspection and expose.

    © Tim Grace, 28 July 2013


    To the reader: Built into the fibre and fabric of this nautical replica is a mischievous spirit. I was at ‘the coast’ doing what poets do at sunrise; walking the wharf. And there she appeared … Notorious … a black caravel. Overnight this ‘dark shadow’ had moored itself to the shoreline. As is her habit, she slips the coast of Australia slinking into ports under cover of dark; under pretence of a plundering prank… black comedy?

    To the poet: This poem was written about an experience; a Notorious encounter of sorts. But like so many interesting snippets there’s a larger back-story. While writing the poem I had no idea the ship was built by an Australian, Graeme Wylie, in his backyard, as recuperative therapy. Graeme, a furniture maker by trade, built the Portuguese Caravel by-eye from surplus wood-stock. In a physical sense, the ship is sheer poetry… a compilation of ideas and a floating metaphor.  (reference: http://scienceillustrated.com.au/blog/in-the-mag/vintage/the-mahogany-ship/)


    Sketch of Dawn
    Sketch of Dawn