Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsMurdering Creek (A Name On The Map)

Murdering Creek (A Name On The Map)

The late NANCY CATO wrote a poem back in the 1980s that daughter Bronnie Norman thought reflected the mood of the times as we approach the vote. She wrote: “Nancy was very passionate about Aboriginal rights and the denial of their wisdom and heritage. She would have been campaigning FOR the Voice!”

Murdering Creek! Who was it murdered here

in the early days, when the Blacks were fierce and wild?

We think of the settler alone in his crude bark hut,

or away from home, leaving his wife and child …..

Uneasy, like ghosts of the dead,

the paperbarks crowd on Murdering Creek today,

above their white reflections in pools of water dark and still.

Even at noon they seem to remember the night

and huddle together in fear; yet out on the lake

sun drenches down in glory, day’s at its height,

clouds are rounded and golden, sky’s serene,

and doubled and trebled in the water’s trembling mirror

white egrets wade, the black swan glides and feeds

above drowned hills and downward-pointing reeds.

Murdering Creek! Silent and dark it flows

between its sheltering banks, among the wild

tangle of creeper and fern, where long ago

a helpless man was killed with his wife and child.

A travelling Kabi making his noonday camp,

spears laid in the grass, no thought of fear.

As he lit his fire, his wife prepared the meal,

and the white men with their guns came creeping near …

A crash and a cry and a leap as the rifles flamed …

A family died, and Murdering Creek was named.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Measures cut bat entanglements

Wildlife rescuers have conducted a daily rescue mission for more than a week to save the lives of little red flying foxes that have...

Ballet double act

Birding in India

More News

Ballet double act

After a year filled with travel, family milestones and time abroad, FitBarre founder Angelika Burroughs has returned to the barre - and to the...

Council asks: what makes Noosa liveable

Five years after Noosa Council conducted its first Liveability Survey in November 2021 it is asking residents to complete the 2026 survey to gain...

Birding in India

Ken Cross has just returned from his sixth birding trip to India. What is it about this country that attracts Ken? He proclaims,...

10 years of finding frog

The Mary River Catchment Coordinating Committee has announced that Find a Frog in February has been gathering data from the Sunshine to Fraser Coast...

Tewantin tennis serves up smash hit

The Tewantin Noosa Tennis Club hosted its first and hugely successful Tennis Party over the weekend, drawing more than 200 locals to its picturesque...

Traditional owners blast dingo kill

Today is a deeply sad day for the Butchulla people, and I want to begin by acknowledging the profound emotional impact this news has...

Discover the last frontier in style, Antarctica awaits

Discover the ‘White Continent’, fabulous Antarctica and sail with Viking’s Antarctic Explorer voyage for thirteen magnificent days. Journey to the stunning Antarctic Peninsula, a landscape...

Slow Down, Breathe and Bathe

In a world that rarely slows down, Japan offers something increasingly rare: space to breathe, time to reflect, and traditions designed to nurture both...

Powell backs dingo kill after tragedy

Environment Minister Andrew Powell has backed a departmental decision to destroy K’gari dingoes found near the body of Canadian visitor and resort worker, Piper...

Dingo kill knee jerk claim

K’gari dingo conservationists have accused the state government of an uninformed knee jerk reaction to the tragic death of Canadian visitor Piper James, whose...