"The Two Fires" (1954) is a poem by Australian poet Judith Wright, also known under the title "Two Fires".
It was originally published in Ern Malley's Journal in November 1954, and was subsequently reprinted in the author's single-author collections and a number of Australian poetry anthologies.
The poet writes of a world that is under the threat of all-consuming nuclear war. She notes that "In the beginning was the fire", a fire that created our world. And now we stand facing another fire, one that will destroy it all.
In her review of The Two Fires collection in The Age Greeba Jamison called the poem "finely wrought", that spoke "with depth and passion the thought of this age, in which the threat of destruction is the background to living."
The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature states, in a commentary on the poet's collection of the same title, that the poem was written at the time of the Korean War and sees "mankind threatened by nuclear holocaust." It goes on: "The poem reflects the uncertainty that worried people as they witnessed the brinksmanship of statesmen prepared to run unimaginable risks to achieve their objectives."
After the poem's initial publication in Ern Malley's Journal it was reprinted as follows: