Prince Alfred Bridge, Gundagai
 
 

When I come back I remember it has
been a long time.
Long time passing since 
I came back along this track to Gundagai— 
town of my childhood.
There are many ghosts—I hear
their voices.
 
I stand on a solid red-gum bridge—the
longest wooden bridge in the world. 
The Irish nuns told me this on a good
day under the gothic arches in the convent 
on the hill where I learnt about Australian history. 
This continent, Australia, is a young country,
they told us. ‘The history of this place is very
shortshortest in the world!’
They’d seen the world—the nuns. 
Maps were pinned on the wall to show 
how far they’d travelled to spread the word.
I’d only seen my Country.
The longest bridge and the shortest history— 
that’s what I learnt. 
 
Prince Alfred Bridge they called it—built
last century—by the pioneers as 
they opened up the lands for progress. 
Our teachers said so.
How many river gums were felled? What 
were their names before they were rearranged 
across the river—once their life blood. 
What was their history? 
My Grandmother said this place is old. 
She said my teachers don’t know the stories.
I listened. 
On a bad day you could be beaten 
for asking the wrong questions about 
the short history and the long bridge.
At school I learnt to hold my tongue.
 
The water under the bridge ripples over 
my memory now. The bend of the 
Murrumbidgee—a deep archive— 
flows steady and slow.
I walk on the bridge and I remember how
long it used to take to cross on my little
legs clinging tight to the side rail as huge 
wheat and wool trucks thundered over the
ancient planks laden with the wealth
of the nation.
 
Sometimes the river rose so high it swallowed
the bridge and the town. Short history almost 
washed away by higher, older tides.
No trucks now. The bridge long ago closed— 
steel and concrete girders bypass the town.
The wealth of the nation rumbles down 
different roads.
 
On the other side I look back across
the flood plains. The old stone convent on
the hill is empty.
I come back after seeing the world.
I hear my Grandmother again.
The bridge is short now. 
But this history of place is still 
deep and long.

View this poem on The Disappearing »