in pale sunshine
granite boulders dot the paddocks ...
I remember
the headstones for miners
who once rushed here for gold
NeverEnding Story, July 23, 2023
Paul Williamson
Commentary: Ls 1&2 establish a muted, elegiac tone. The “pale sunshine” suggests diminished warmth and vitality, while the granite boulders “dot[ting] the paddocks” evoke a quiet, almost incidental permanence. These natural forms function as a kind of unconscious memorial, subtly anticipating the explicitly human markers of loss introduced in Ls 4&5.
A shift unfolds between past and present land use. The once-chaotic energy of the gold rush—captured in the single, kinetic verb “rushed” in L5 —gives way to the stillness of an agricultural landscape. This contrast heightens the sense of transience: human urgency and desire flare briefly, then recede, leaving behind a subdued and enduring terrain.
The tanka’s emotional force lies in the visual and conceptual parallel between the granite boulders and the miners’ headstones. The rocks scattered across the paddocks mirror the graves, suggesting that the miners have, in a sense, merged with the land they sought to exploit. What remains is not the gold they pursued, but the granite itself—solid, unyielding, and indifferent.
In this way, the tanka becomes a socio-historical meditation on impermanence. Human ambition, however intense, is fleeting; the landscape absorbs its traces and returns to stillness, bearing only quiet witness to what has passed.