Published in Overland Issue 230 Autumn 2018 · Uncategorized Dropbear poetics | Judith Wright Poetry Prize, third place Evelyn Araluen Tiddalik say I’m such great thirst I will drain the land and drag my big fat belly across the empty sea Bunyip say I’m gonna gobble you up if you step waters where I sleep and with wet claws I will snatch your spine and ankles to fill them with stain and stench what the Mopoke say don’t need saying if you grown up under his eyes now here’s the part you write Black Snake down for a dilly of national flair true god you don’t know how wild I’m gonna be to every fucking postmod blinky bill tryna crack open my country mining in metaphors for that place you felt felt you somewhere in the Royal National Waagan says use heart but I am rage and dreaming at the gloss green palm fronds of this gentry aesthetantique all this potplanting in our sovereignty a garden for you to swallow speak our blood if you’re taking that talk you gotta scrape it from my schoolhouse walls filter gollywog ashtray snugglepot kitsch into your pastoral deconstruct fill four’n twenty pies with artisan magpies if you sever their heads you can wear them to the doof I say rage and dreaming for making liar the lyrebird for making mimetic the power Baiami gave when Ribbon’s mischief swallowed first life ochre dust creation breath ancestor song we aren’t here to hear you poem you do wrong you get wrong you get gobbled up Image: illustration from Blinky Bill, written and illustrated by Dorothy Wall Read the rest of Overland 230 If you enjoyed this poem, buy the issue Or subscribe and receive four outstanding issues for a year Evelyn Araluen Evelyn Araluen is a Goorie and Koori poet, researcher and co-editor of Overland Literary Journal. Her Stella-prize winning poetry collection DROPBEAR was published by UQP in 2021. She lectures in Literature and Creative Writing at Deakin University. More by Evelyn Araluen › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 22 November 202422 November 2024 · Fiction A map of underneath Madeleine Rebbechi They had been tangled together like kelp from the age of fourteen: sunburned, electric Meg and her sidekick Ruth the dreamer, up to all manner of sinister things. So said their parents; so their teachers reported when the two girls were found down at the estuary during a school excursion, whispering to something scaly wriggling in the reeds. 21 November 202421 November 2024 · Fiction Whack-a-mole Sheila Ngọc Phạm We sit in silence a few more moments as there is no need to talk further; it is the right place to end. There is more I want to know but we had revisited enough of the horror for one day. As I stood up to thank Bác Dzũng for sharing his story, I wished I could tell him how I finally understood that Father’s prophecy would never be fulfilled.