
|
A
Places
|
Places of Literary Significance ‘Just then the city lights shone out: Each name shone forth as brightest gold; A strange, sweet perfume played about And in my heart crept peace, untold … I felt … warm hands … upon my own … My son … kept tryst … at the Grey Stone.’ ‘Anzac Eve’ Margaret Curran
Access
to the memorial is east along Campbell Street to the edge of the escarpment.
Here the Camphor Laurel avenue opens out into the immediate lawns of the
park and the distant views of the Lockyer valley to the east and the border
ranges to the south. The effect of this opening out from avenue to view
is to emphasise the sense of space which then acts as a foil for the literary
memorial in the foreground.
The placement of the monument to the poet in this beautiful setting is intended to create associations with the poet's rendering of that scene and scenes like it in his verse, as well as with the rural development of the agricultural valley which the park commands. The monument itself consists of two truncated sandstone columns of unequal length united by a trevase of the same stone mounted upon a basalt pedestal. Each column is encircled with a spiraling garland of laurel leaves in high relief. According to convention the truncated columns signify a life cut short while the laurel leaves symbolise the spirit of his verse, which remains a living force in the world he has departed. The monument is inscribed on each side with verse quotations from the poet's work including the following from 'Toowoomba': Dark purple,
chased with sudden gloom and glory,
Submissions
and suggestions for places not yet included can be sent to leec@usq.edu.au |
||||
|
|||||