Abstract:According to Australian famous poet Judith Wright, Australia was viewed by her new inhabitants either as a land of exile or as a land of hope. To the former, the sense of exile contributed to European settlers’ view that Australian landscape was monotonous, grey, grotesque, funereal and hostile. Wright claimed that in Australian poetry, Australian landscape was either absent or Helllike or weird, on the contrary, British sightseeing was showed, and some writers described Australia as deserted city opposite to Garden of Eden. Wright suggested that only when European descent writers saw Utopia in Australia, had empathy with it and tried to live at peace with the new environment, could they eulogize the unique beauty of her beloved Australia.