The Intersection of Traffic and Light

        Cottonwood seed-snow drifts down, carried by unseen current from the unsold land behind us. Cars wait at the intersection where red light burns in the scattering soft releases of seed parachuting from all sides of the compass-sphere, from cottonwood trees in the floating genome.

        Messages streak through patched-together space as if this kelson of the creation were no different than probability, as if revolving magnetic arms of the planet’s iron core were bubbling up out of subdimensions and emptiness in daylight that maps what seems to be chance.

        Cottonwood trees of the unknown future drift through the intersection carried by aesthetic thermal spin into the slide of a van door shut, the roll of a shopping cart over a cracked walk, the swipe of a Studebaker fin out of the ’50s as the slightest intent parachutes in slow motion, erasing speeds, sinking root into the future of intersections where red lingers and cars charge on, burning the matter of extractions.

        The atmosphere around the human body mostly remains invisible, as if not a lot about breathing has changed, as if anyone’s untoward chemistry were naturally reabsorbed by subdimensions, and the overflow of people were just a cottonwood snow revealing smallest currents and spires of local thermals in the intersection of matter and space, where the mastodon in the room is this air that lowers its massive head to aim terrific corkscrew tusks at the immediate causes of extinction.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Surely Someone

‘Tenement Building’ (black & white photograph), Chris Kilip, Tate Britain, 2014.


you view the house from across the street
part of a terrace it fills the frame
the roof is cut off no sky dim light

upstairs a balcony
door window bricked-up defiant
downstairs a curtain is torn
you move in closer but can’t see into the room
front door pint of milk on the step
dustbin on the kerb

it’s the pint of milk that disturbs you
you wait if you wait surely someone
will fetch in the milk …

not even a sparrow pecks at the silver-top
the house bereft of sound
is like the backdrop to a disused stage
rain has left sheen on the tarmac

a month later you read:
bull-dozers arrived like thunder

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Homecoming

the gutters are slick with moss
a bunch of tulip bulbs lies discarded in the yard,
with roots tangled like hair in a drain
and dad’s let the jasmine grow absolutely mental this year.

returning to my childhood, home i find
pyjamas starched, at least two sizes ago,
a deflated football, smelling of wet and ants.
the Wild Bouquet Air Wick muscles its way into my nostrils
and the walls remain standing, but they’re shaky on their pins,
like they’ve had one too many,
and sway like the fish line string
of a marionette puppet.

I collapse dully onto the bed of my dead brother
and the unslept sheets send up a plume of dust,
like a cloud, or an embrace.

open the window begging to be warmed by a light that isn’t there –
it rains.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Anger

i.m. Ric
to lose is to be in the game


Waking to anger
hauling that fire
through the day
every day
bloody tongues
licking the crater
frozen by courtesy

he thinks:
there must be
millions like me.
If you made a country of us,
would the U.N. be interested?
If you threw us
into Federation Square
tied at the ankle,
armed with razors,
would we challenge
Friday night football
for spectators?

Help us out here.
Name an orchid after failure.
Hang aspiration
from Flinders Street station.
Graffito government
with Gaudi twirl.

Give us
a Hallmark issue
of Dia de Muertes

tell us you’re breath for our wings
as you press us down
such a pity you’re so heavy!

We’ll soon
learn your steel saw through iron
roofing tenor whine
as though it were song

and understand, though
we don’t know how,
that we were, always, wrong.

It seems you’re the best we can do.
How can we not believe you?

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Method Actor

Feel along the wall for an opening. Din.
A helicopter lands on the hospital roof. “Then prove it.”
Rush of something.

Walk backwards in lanyards to my hill
You are there but it was never
green. You are shielding your eyes saying

“don’t look at the dark storm, stormy”.
I knock you down at a run.
The TV is flickering black and white.

I’m not what you did.
I’m not nothing happened.
I’m not the thing instead that stands before you.

I want to drive away,
But there is no key for the ignition. Hill’s on fire,
Hill’s on fire. The car won’t start.

The cyclone blew dust into the lounge.
Early ‘80s Melbourne was sepia
even then. We are humble actors.

Good, unknown but now the
blue decodes.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Worth words? (or what I loved at fifteen)

I have felt, I have felt a disturbance that
presences with the alleviation of joyed
things, almost fifty summers, fifty winters
and the sister in the earth, myself tucked
into the YHA near Windermere. I take a track
through ancestral country that stiles my steps
through wood, through thoughts infused with
sublimation, a motion that impels the object

of the spirit, the role of things. Was Einstein
rattling Mallarmé’s die?
Imagine the abbey
tinted with the deeds of priests. There is nothing
here you say. And everything you loved. Your
setting words roll down the air, round and
round the smooth stone of your prayer.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Blank lyric

What does the street know?
both of its centuries
have disappeared
this was
a manufacturing warehouse
now a fitness gym
a cafe an imported
fancy european bike outlet
this was a corner shop

the police never come here
to this whatever,
who’d phone for them
no one burns a car round here
not for insurance not for fun
no one burns anything, no rage

eddie says you’d have to choose
audi soft top sports car?
4 wheel drive weed spreader?
‘police cars are always good’

we’re at 107 Projects
astrid’s artwork’s pinned up
white A4 sheets
prose paragraphs
against the grey wall

held by her line,
coinciding with mine
(written independently of hers)
‘The use value of a breakup
is thus the capacity
to steal and burn a car’
i.e. she concludes
a paragraph of prose
on avoiding
‘the pathology of heartbreak’
(astrid lorange)

*

things I never say to friends
whenever I talk to them
email takes
too much typing
to explain
anyway it’s all scroll or arrow
next message

what I meant was
I’d talk about today’s news
the picture of the boy
being tasered to death

who ever chooses
‘law & order’

or

austerity measures –
veiled ideologies
in untroubled countries

or

the ‘high’ alert upgrade
the ASIO guy introduces
on the eve of his retirement,
a gold watch grenade

(war on error
war on death cult
same same same
endless error)

*

decrepit mentors
who won’t retire
grooming acolytes
for true belief
charmed, flocking
to their transformation

others seem to survive
somewhere
where everything
is ‘after baudelaire’
though actually
after him
is renée vivien

throwaway scraps
flashes & slips
notes on reverse sides
of receipts, envelopes,
paper tickets
in pencil or pen,
my method

*

for hours, I can sit
in a plastic chair
looking interested
(recently
for two & a half
hours)
at any meeting or event

life has brought me privacy
mental lurking
researching twenty-four-seven

in the background
dub incorporated
roots music I suppose
nothing to do
with this actual culture,
here,
but available to me
& I am a white person

*

in a world
that really
has been turned
on its head
truth
is a moment
of falsehood

__________________________

It was autumn
osama bin laden
had just been
dropped into the ocean

we continued remembering
time was becoming
less & less

no one had heard of
the ebola river –
we used to call that place
‘warring zaire’
now the democratic republic
of the congo

*

some kind of concert
or documentary
shouting from the radio
sounds like conflict
a female complainant
‘a singer & a poet’

ending up
listed in a chapter –
The Invisible Women
of Australian Poetry
in mid-C21
a young lesbian’s
research project

in the nineteen seventies
a man could be
‘an honorary woman’
& attend
women’s liberation
collective meetings,
sometimes

*

capital is one thing
life has not brought me
Catalyst Money,
not a bank,
a smartalternative
my account
is a dwindler
their emphasis on smart

money buys stuff
there’s probably
more stuff than people

*

the virus
is returning
to its source

__________________________

The only things that are true
are exaggerations
the dreams do not dream

oodgeroo noonuccal
gave me back
the problem
long before
I knew she did

whiteness

then
over forty years ago
kevin gilbert told us
‘white australia’
should leave
‘black australia’
alone.

he was right.

‘diversity’
sounds positive
not irrefutable

those parts of the day
when you’re disconcerted
(often)

*

crawl in the flint
on abandoned
open-cut floors
eat dust cry sticky tears
break skin give up

impossible
to not be
what the implications
of any history make you
to not be
part of a white default
all you ever do
discontinues only
a skerrick
of its futile record

_______________________________

Outside the clinic
‘incompleteness
was our only hope’
says amanda
right into my ears
direct from the player
I already know
there’s no purpose,
there’s only life,
living,
but she’s talking about
the 20th century
not about today
now
at the hospital,
experimental stammering
altered words aphasia
breath distorted confab
turning noise to sound,
a live vocal performance
(amanda stewart
‘matter in the mouth’)
broadcast on radio
last week

so, ‘incompleteness’


Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Mick

I imagine there is a door facing you,
half open, half closed,
maybe some stranger’s fingerprints around the handle,
those dead leaves heaped by time.
you may have coughed once or twice;
I remember some vague pledge to quit the smokes,
a wry smile and the hours fanning out in languid ripples.
passing laughter in the hall, perhaps,
the ticking clock of it shiny as a needle
falling to the floor in front of you,
the last place the ones who really mean it look.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

The National as A Way of Interpreting My Favourite Martian

I’m thinking about how I understand you; if garages or Martian
food were made illegal. If I name George by
looking at Nigel. I look at Nigel: I look
at night. Like a storybook, yet much more visceral
I get under a clod but have reception problems
I had to ask a magpie what Puritanism was. They said
you can imagine what. Everywhere people were grasping their own
metaphysical waists
as if a metaphysical circus act. My
Favourite Martian
wasn’t like that, yet all
thought it normal. It’s why we needed
brownies. The newspapers were like people who wanted to be newspapers
by screwing themselves up and hiding in a brownie and
invading a Martian’s body and only then were they finally
satisfied. ‘Did they hate Martians?’ a magpie might ask later
Well, it’s funny. The poem invasion. It was more like a
virus than a slum landlord. Or maybe more energetic. That we
could think in this antennaed way suggests the civic good of
returning to black and white TV lounges, to telepathic postures

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Stone Horses

Each horse in this frieze is unique in temperament and personality. No horse is a duplicate of any
other; the arrangement of head, neck, body, and limbs differs in each, even if only slightly

– “Horse Care as Depicted on Greek Vases before 400 B.C.”, Mary B. Moore


I

On the frieze
plaster has peeled
across one flank
and buttock

open-book
nicked stone
feels parched
as meat.

All along the wall
stern forelegs bend in
towards lined bellies, flush
and veined in plaster.

More frozen steeds
arching for
the best hands
money can pass.

II

Your face is familiar
from the walls at
my university, and here
you are also mounted:

stunned eye stretched bare,
plum nostrils and mouth
peeled back, as though
reined to breakage line.

They have no ear
for you here, either –
eyelids hollow as your
plaster body, lower set

than in Perth. I itch
to translate distance
palming forehead, but will
not provoke ejection.

III

No mouth
is identical
along any
frieze here.

Each pony
is strung
up, erect
lip curls

neck bulges with
indignant whispers,
museum rush
of waterline manes

missing Centauric
claim of body,
smooth agency
of traded plaster.

IV

These teeth are poised
for battle.
Hock arcs to tuck
chipped hooves
to strike.
To fight is no
foreign thought,
though all known equine bickering
pales before
such organised iron intent
to maim.
Each leap and snap
for display
is rerouted, ridden down
no path
any horse could hope
to follow.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Night Spaces

I get up to use the bathroom
and all is dark. No little red
or green points of light
only the blue beams
seen from the stovetop
at the right angle.
This has not happened
since we lived in Autumn Park
after graduation. Before the advent
of smartphones. Before we had
a decent coffeemaker or wireless
towers, routers, printers—friends
I sometimes try to make them
when I can’t find sleep
and end up sitting in near darkness
among the false stars.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Nostalgia Half-life

Nostalgia should be labeled a hazardous material
the further you bury the memories
the more your cellular structure
becomes contaminated
and your emotions unstable
simultaneously volatile and disabled.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Artefact

Georgia O’Keeffe & Alfred Stieglitz


Their lives have split apart but still they spend
the winter months, those short dark days, together.
And their connection has become a myth
for both of them, a structure that lives on.
I saw a ziggurat of beeswax once,
a tall stepped edifice of dullest gold,
breathing the faintest scent of honey through
the gallery, although the liquid sweetness
that had lived within the comb was gone.
The energy that flowed between them, gleamed
in photographs and paintings, has lapsed now.
From what remains they mould this artefact:
as keep-sake for the sake of keeping faith,
as truthful and delusive as a myth.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Lullaby

Our sun-cankered, frost-lacerated old bomb
has usurped a spot beside a Milky Way of faces.
Fingers tapping on the dash, I stare up at pigeons
filibustering on ledges outside floors lit
by cleaners; at the back of my hand
charting middle age’s sargassos; and you,
calling some last instructions
like streamers at a ship’s departure
as you cross to lean reluctantly on the door.
Would adages I should have draped over
your slender neck have hung so heavily? “How will you find me
in the dark if all your friends have left the party?”
Your laughter: “Dad, I’d recognise those headlights anywhere!”

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Helen 1962 – 2012

I’m relieved you’ve been spared embalming:
You look like yourself, just elsewhere –
Your energy dispersed, around your house,
Whispering in the trees, in the air.

I recall the young woman who suited her grey hair,
Whose smile radiated the length of Dale Road,
Who hailed me down to say, ‘Hello, I’m Helen’.
It must have been 1997, and we became friends.

Friends and fellow travellers, fellow strugglers,
Who’d talk about their addictions, about the redemptive
Nature of art, and how life is a day-by-day proposition.
See you Helen, in the night sky, in the wild beyond.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Asks

What’s it like to be refurbished
tackled or finger-printed?
It’s not something you can ask
but I’m asking.
What is it like to be watched
waited, frisked?
Whenever I worry about my suit
my transparency, I don’t think of brightness
but calories, phones, ancient trees.
Does it matter who Beyoncé was
or what shalala means?
It’s all dancing lies amongst truths
yours or mine.
Our threats are whatever
and whatever will save us.
We know plexiglass, expecto patronus
or police presence won’t save us.
I interpret the clouds
but they aren’t the rules.
The rules are comments and spam.
Go get the questions!
Where are the questions?
Answers are here, unasked.
My hands are softer than they used to be.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Some words no longer work

I tried changing the batteries on the word SORRY today, rubbed the terminals clean of the caustic build-up from the power source that used to run it, until it ran it dry. My neighbours only know me by shadow or consequence. I said THANK YOU to a shopkeeper yesterday and was ejected from the store. Choosing your words is almost an occupational hazard in this society of scrabbled language. I can’t talk to you because our computers are not compatible and our songlines aren’t in tune. You’re not welcome to knock on my door to see if I’m ok or if I’d like to come over for a drink until you befriend me in the vortex of cyberspace. Our own digital footprints put fear in our systems, syntax error, syntax error, syntax error…a new dictionary of linguistic abuse has arisen from the era of Terror. I’ve forgotten how to have a conversation without editing myself or censoring my desire to communicate. Please contact me on a secure line as my feelings may incriminate me and some of my thoughts may be illegal. Freedom is a word that I’ve bought with a mortgage and am paying heavily for. How will the history of this time be written, when some words no longer work?

A fly in the ointment,
quid pro quo and excuses,
not a time for tongues…

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Shafted

It’s the long hair, untenably straight, and
the swinging eye, like a moon losing orbit.
There has always been trouble brewing –
rising to a knot and then smoothing off
like a yacht setting sail for a trip
around the horn, hardly progressing
against the current; actually against the
direction the world is spinning in.
Such a wearisome traveller – confused
but ever-hopeful, I’ve seen you nod
your grey head, a hollow cheek and down-
line – you are sweet but unwell, pierced
but uncut – we have always gotten along.
There are, after all, no false timelines
– a few breaches perhaps, a few ragged
stories, but they are harmless details
done up and hilarious in their impossibility,
as unpredictable as a shooting star
briefly experienced from the ground
looking up. Your thinness and fighting lungs
are the whip of a narrow cord – it flails
in any breeze but never breaks. We wait
for the grinding down of bone
to chalk, and it always eventuates.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Surplus

A surplus of appendages.
A register of distorted perceptions.

Shoved into the circular opening of the device,
waves of magnetic composition flutter the flesh.
You use your personality to get the honey out.

Metals in the blood reconsider their assumed
fidelity to the body the blood supports, it communicates.
Radically rooting for the opponent.

It feels like divine intervention, but
might just be an inferior kind of fabric.
What do you even want to be?

I think of something as vague as our genitalia,
as if they could be differentiated.
Of the order of velveteen, velour, rayon.

What if I told you, you have to appear
at the government agency, face to face
with the good burghers, their smiling offspring.
I said I was a catalogue, a trace.

There exists an unbroken line of narrative,
a conversation, between fashion and war.
My flight landed hard on the pykrete carrier.

For the first time since the peaceful autumn,
the fall, we are presented with the opportunity
to approach the skin as a fabric.
Woah, I couldn’t handle the goods.

The sovereign is that which decides to suspend its relation.
I think of your sex, of its wealth, our surfaces
as vague arrangements.

Say you work less than twenty hours.
No, say it.

You attempt to purchase the street magazine sold by the homeless,
but fall short by forty cents.
The destitute console you.

Did you shake the book?
Did you reassign the relevant officers?

I voted to send the citizens to contain the police.
I vote to erase the citizen.

Is it possible to use sex as a kind of manipulative solvent?
Leaning intently onto the joints.

I never wanted to be a part of your series:
people you love in embarrassing headwear.
Would you like milk, sugar, milk with sugar, or just milk, or just sugar?

I was doing my being confidence trick.
I evolved two nasal openings, and the rest followed suit.

Gradually, I acquired the capacity to read, then put it on the market.
We began to open by appointment only, like in nature.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Devouring the (Un)Happy Years

Grandfather had stubby tough hands
that fit within green plastic bucket
layered wet manure into cement-square garden beds
forged New South Wales Railroads
and sunny fat plum trees
in his long grey-paling Yagoona yard.
Didn’t talk
while drinking milky tea
fortified by garage copper still
read broadsheet news
at red linoleum tabletop
bunkered in household-kitchen
doled hard-edge
50 cent
to give hairy brown shoulder hug
smelling thick of pipe tobacco.
Horn-rimmed heavy glasses
Bonds tight blue singlet
matching job faded Stubbies,
embodied eastern European desire
to make Australia home
he spoke five languages
while casting State Government lines
taught other immigrants English
practicing their tongues.
Not once conversed with me about labour
hammering metal inside work camp.
After broken dawn sabre charge
across infantry
left light horse shoes fallen
on forest road
flanked
machine-gun torn
Polish grass
of Krojanty field.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Alice at Last

Either the well was very deep, or she fell very slowly … – Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland


I un-wake to damage.
Neurotic light-bulb flicks
once off, once on, illuminates
imagined city
skyline.

Inside my bedroom it rains
for days. The head
full of synaptic hauntings
shudders. Old-milk sky,
dimming.

I tell myself there is
a world outside
the world. Stay still
completely
still and gather dust.
Watch the fretful halls.

Walls convulse,
contract & close. The filament
at the bulb’s heart flickers. I
am half
dream-drowned Lethe.

There is a sickness not worth
surfacing. Better
to sink. To listen: soft light, soft
light
& the pressure
of doorways.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Heathward

Peeling back a wet blanket
of bracken more or less dead
on its feet, a small patch,
one warily pulled head at a time;
hoping to see the doused
coastal heath, that still smokes
underneath, reignite.
Hot-pink flowering Heath’s installed,
Prickly’s Beauty and Moses, Yellow
Spiky Bitterpea, Sagg: the names,
lit upon like the moled plants,
won’t disclose the wanted wealth
of paucity, desiccation
to be risked in these days
of declining rainfall. Planting
stones at the feet of baby shrubs
to dissuade rabbitual
excavations. Taking fresh
pademelon scats as a sign
of progress: remnant native grasses
reconvening as the patch dries out.
And this morning an Eastern Spinebill,
deeply addicted to the sweets inside
each dripping bell of Heath, grinned
through the patch like good luck,
peppering the bared ground pink
with rifled flowers.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

finite

my grandfather said it’s good not to have
to think about blinking or breathing
blood gases sugars or supply
to the brain it’s good not to have
to remember to breathe in
after you breathe out
forget and you lose everything
you have no longer
to remember to think

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged

Not under Lake Eucumbene

for Adrian, Bonny, Fiona and Lindsay


State-owned water floated,
a new sky.
Raised floor plans are bones of fish in mud.
Dead trees signpost hushed streets
lined with rushes.
Concrete steps lead up
to an absence of church.
Ochre struts from a ute chassis, rusted through,
flake off as slabs of poor shale
or ancient timber.
Fifty years of silt and wash on these spoils
brought them to a dusty sheen
under drought –
death’s own shining resuscitator.

And when Adaminaby
first rises, memory is a plot of panic.
When the old town and its foundations and cisterns,
chimneys and well-tops surface through air,
the breathy wind is across them,
it hisses
the topsoil skyward, coarse with rumour.
The sun
thrashes at a boat ramp that slopes to more ground,
with its cracked contracted wounds peeling scales.
Drowned trees are stuck waders.
There’s nothing here
that’s not residue. A boy, once lost in town,
now has a useless map in his grey head.

Posted in 66: OBSOLETE | Tagged