Innocence, a poem by Colleen Keating In memory of a drowning tragedy at The Entrance

 

Innocence

(i.m.. of Laith age 11)

The days slip quietly by. We are hoping 
to forget – those of us who can. The family 
have had signs put up on significant posts 
thanking everybody for their help, support
and care over the days and nights of searching,
praying and waiting and grief has closed their doors
and lives with its heavy chains.

The channel from the lake flows like an ancient
witness, its mouth wide and unaware that 
its innocent chant like a child’s choir 
has taken innocence.

Pines and banksia form a wild weave 
against a sobering sky. A heron, called the guardian
of the edge, feeds as it does every dawn. 
Light today plays gently on the edge of the rocks,
licks into the sand,  ebbing and flowing. 
A few gulls stand pondering. Pelicans skate along
their reflection with abandonment. 

The sunflowers tied on the fence remind us 
what love was taken. A child’s colourful wind–mill 
plays on the sea breeze, candles and soft toys
soften the chained fence above the dunes
flowers with bewildered messages wilt in the sun 
and sorrow cries to us here. We want to forget, 
pretend the sea is our joy and happy place 
but like an arrow piecing one mothers heart 
we are reminded how it gives and  takes
and in its innocence takes the innocent.

Colleen Keating

 

(Laith Alaid had been visiting The Entrance at the mouth of Tuggerah Lake on a fishing trip with his family from Sydney when he was taken by a strong current that was described by a local life saver as one an “Olympic swimmer couldn’t swim against”.6 Nov 2024)