Australia, (1924-2010)
The Season
‘It’s the season of the overdose.’
— A hospital Sister, Christmas-time
- This is the season of the overdose
- and of the slaughtered pig
- with the apple in its mouth for the hearty house.
- To those who have lost heart but survive the self
- administered slaughterous bottle in the mouth,
- greetings, in the teeth of the pig
- with the bite of the pill that isn’t appled ham.
- The season’s a sow in the pen of Knum the ram,
- the animal god Egyptian to the tribes
- who worshipped orgies, on the way to a promised land
- ordained for birth and the carpentry of a cross
- that nailed a manger’s hand.
- For the meanwhile hearty house, promise prescribes
- the appetite given to those
- already in the reach of the greed of the overdose,
- and glad tidings of great joy as just a hymn
- of habit, like the bottled star of Bethlehem.
About the Poet:
David Harold Rowbotham, Australia, (1924-2010), was a poet, author, teacher, editor and journalist. He studied at the University of Queensland and the University of Sydney. Rowbotham served in the Second World War on the Pacific front as a Royal Australian Air Force wireless operator for a mobile fighter sector.
Rowbotham then worked as a freelance journalist in Sydney, and later London. Then back in Australia, he became a journalist for the Toowoomba Chronicle and Brisbane Courier-Mail (1955-64). He lectured in English at the University of Queensland (1965-1969), and became the literary critic of the Brisbane Courier-Mail (1969-1980), and its literary editor (1980-1987). While working as a full time journalist, Rowbotham also pursued a distinguished career as a poet, publishing more than fourteen collections in his lifetime..
Though lyrical in form, Rowbotham’s poems are often concerned with history. His contribution to Australian literature was recognized by a number of awards, including the Australia Council’s Writers’ Emeritus Award (1989), the Order of Australia (AM) in 1991, and the Patrick White Award in 2007. [DES-03/18]
Additional information:
- David Rowbotham at the Poetry Library of Australia
- David Rowbotham – obituary at The Australian