Post-Epic: it's all downhill from here!

10 March 2010

As the story of the tortoise and the hare illustrates, a lack of speed is not always a bad thing. The same applies to our Post-Epic poetry project, which has attracted 750 lines since it was launched in mid-December last year.

750 lines!!

While our original 10,000 line target is pretty much unachievable now (unless we were to approve all of our spam comments, which would get us there in a matter of hours), I still think we can crack the big 1,000.

Do you think you can help?

If every member of our Facebook group contributed one line, it would be game over. If every one of our subscribers contributed one line, we'd more than double our total. If everyone in the whole world contributed just one line … okay, you get the idea.

It's difficult to pick a favourite poem from the thirty four Post-Epics, particularly as they currently vary in length from seventeen to thirty-six lines, but it's hard to go past w.m. lewis' man walks into bar, with its repeated refrain. Check this out:

Man walks into bar.

the police blame the bar

wallpaper, small window, the low mist hangs

alcohol fumes climb the walls

where dead men run a tab

You think this is a joke

said the ambulatory anus

A haze of horizon.

Man balks. Call him ‘The Tsar'

glasses shatter in his eye

which had been full of eastern promises

but now shies away from the light

when Tsar walks into the police

and says, ‘You lookin' for a fight?'

- bar none – the habit-wearing one replies

don't interrupt we're doing the sudoku

too dunkin our churros d'orge in leaves to help ya

Soz bout that. The man looks on and laughs. He's

all talk, no action. All bark, no bite.

Heads lift from their schooners to survey the stranger

but the eyes are glassed

in a kind of, Liam Gallagher way

an upstart, only three chords roll here

another round rolls over and plays dead,

the barkeep threatens cut-off

can easy size up sordid sag of time

until The Tsar's dog nosey's in, lookin' for a morsal

a man walks into a bar

holding up a STOP sign, idle onlookers laugh

Idiots.

In a vodka oasis, screwing with the stasis.

Still knife.

Yet life still.

yet still, Idiots! they scream, and are barred, barred,

finches that fight and fly in equal measure

one potato, two potato, three potato, four

man walks into fish and chip shop -

it's a touch too much to blame the fish

Now if that's not a hivemind at work, I don't know what is.

Of course, with thirty four poems to choose from, sometimes it's a bit hard to know where a line is needed. All I can say is: go for it! Once we've reached our 1,000 line target, we'll present the poems in all their ragged and delightful glory. Until then, fire away!

This entry was posted in DIALOGUE, NEWSBLOG and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.
David Prater

About David Prater


David Prater is Cordite's managing editor. He holds a BA from the University of Sydney, an MA from the University of Melbourne and a PhD from Swinburne University of Technology. His first poetry colllection, We Will Disappear, was published by papertiger media in 2007, and Vagabond Press published his chapbook Morgenland in the same year. His poetry has appeared in a wide range of Australian and international journals, and he has performed his work at festivals in Australia, Japan, Bulgaria, Canada, the United States, the Netherlands and Macedonia. He has also undertaken two writers’ residencies in Seoul, Republic of Korea, and has worked extensively as a teacher, editor and researcher. He currently lives in Karlskrona, Sweden where he is undertaking post-doctoral research on electronic literature and pedagogy at Blekinge Tekniska Högskola.

Website:
http://daveydreamnation.com

Further reading:

Related Posts:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>