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Auntie Nell's Pink and White Terraces


Nell, my mother's younger sister,
was their family's carrier of joy,

laughter bringer,
brightener of reunions.

Sad then that she was childless - 
the Japanese War

found her young husband Jorgie,
fresh off his Aussie sheep farm,

in Singapore, so into Changi
where Aussie and Allied soldiers

suffered, died - in Jorgie's case,
nearly died. Surviving, returned,

reunited (hadn't she worked
those war years in Sydney,

seen in the harbour that
Japanese submarine!)

they farmed again, up
Armidale way, prospered

due to the Korean War wool boom - 
all those winter uniforms;

retired to the Queensland
surf coast, the Gold Coast,

a unit near the water,
bowling club society.

Still she pined for New Zealand,
sisters, nephews, nieces,

and her early days, Napier
before the Quake; when asked,

'What present from there 
might I bring you?' replied:

'How about the Pink and White
Terraces? bring me them!'

No one living had seen them -
Mount Tarawera had erupted,

burying the 'eighth wonder'
Victorian tourists had trekked to.

But their strange beauty lived on
in paintings and early photos 

coloured like coconut-ice -
age-old silica formations,

tourists bathing in its warm pools - 
adorning walls in farmsteads

like those of Nell's childhood.
It took some years, my hunt.

At length, visiting her again,
widowed now, and 'in care',

I took from their cylinder
three bright reproductions:

The Terraces, Pink, White,
and both somehow together.

'You duffer,' she laughed, 'How 
can I make use of these here?'

There was no wall for them.
Back they went to Auckland -

'Here, sister, Nell can't use them.'
They went into her hall cupboard.

My last visits to Nell lacked laughter:
'This is a slow cancer' - I was dumb.

When her will was read, every
niece and nephew had bequests

but me, something much
pondered since, wryly.

Nell's bequest to my sister
she shared between me and her.

Years later, I asked for the Terraces.
Out they came, cylinder and its

contents ruined by damp,
obliterated as well as had been

the originals by last
century's Tarawera eruption.