For example are the horse events at the Sydney Easter Show, bush ? Is the Pizza Hut at Mount Isa, bush ? The big B Doubles roll through the urban streets these days. Urban streets are full of four wheel drive bush bashers. Country towns have franchise stores like McDonalds, Eagle Boys,Noni B and Wendy's donuts, and the rural petrol stations are owned by Woolworths and Coles. My conclusion is that a discussion of bush content in our verse is a non-event.
Now a discussion of poetic content, that's a different matter.
I thought about this because two of our members Marty and Sue put a couple of short pieces in the homework which I think are very good and show an understanding of what the "poetic voice " might be.
I think we should examine our bush " poetry" to see if it looks like just stories, jokes and messages set out in verse and rhyme. Ask ourselves if what we write is of such a style as to be better off simply set out in prose. Prose in metre and rhyme is hardly any more distinguished than the feeblest " free verse "
Does rhyming make poetry? Would some of our verse would be much more interesting and engaging if it was done as essays or short stories ? I think we need to think a lot about these issues. And if we want to be bush, do we use phrases and expressions that no ordinary rural person would ever think of; just for the sake of fitting the supposed all important rhyme.
( Yes, I ask myself these questions )
The Scottish poet Robbie Burns wrote a " bush " poem about plowing on a farm and how he had disturbed a mouse's nest with the plow. This poem is very very famous. Even in the Sydney Domain there is a large sculpture depicting Robbie Burns standing next to a plow with the mouse's nest in front of the plowshare.
Is this poem famous because of it's rural theme, resonating with the country folk ? No , no, no not at all. The poem is famous for these lines
" The best laid plans of mice and men
Often go awry "
I reckon it's a safe bet that most people don't know of the poem, it's story or it's title or even it's author. But who has not heard the aphorism " the best laid plans of mice and men " ?
See what I mean?
It's not the story. Or even the setting. It's the power of language.
That's what poetry is.
I think we need to learn that lesson, or bush poetry will not survive. Keeping
some supposed purity of theme won't keep it alive. In the history of the arts, purity of theme or form has always been a recipe for failure.
What made me think of bush poetry becoming moribund was how over this last weekend hardly anyone posted anything on this forum, and we seem to constantly lose contributers, some of which I thought were very good. I miss them and wonder why they have seemingly lost interest.
My latest ramblings. Now you can beat me up.

