we lived without time then
when Lake St Clair blew to waves
that cabin luxury for us
wood table and chairs
the bunk off the floor
I was reading
Crime and Punishment
too young for temptation
we loved each other
no regret beneath our tan lines
in those days I could eat
a whole loaf and honey
the visiting heron had no song
in the rounds of its silent joy
just the thwack of happiness
you said I should read
The Ginger Man
while holding Jean-Paul’s trilogy
This poem was first published, translated into Farsi, in Persian Sugar in English Tea, a bilingual anthology of short poems and haikus edited by Soodebah Saeidnia and Aimal Zaman Yusufzai, and in Unstill Mosaics: The Book of Love, Loss, and Longing, Busybird Publishing, 2019.
James Walton is published in many anthologies, journals, and newspapers. He has been shortlisted for the ACU National Poetry Prize, the MPU International Poetry Prize, The James Tate Prize, and the Ada Cambridge Prize. Five collections of his poetry have been published. He was nominated for ‘The Best of the Net’ 2019, and was a Pushcart Prize 2021 nominee. He is a winner of the Raw Art Review Chapbook Prize. His fifth poetry collection, Snail Mail Cursive, was published by Ginninderra Press in January 2023. Having spent a great part of his life in the Strzelecki ranges, the "part of Tasmania which didn’t break away from the mainland", he now resides in Wonthaggi in an Edwardian house which was once a small maternity hospital.