The Geography Lesson

from Skulváði Úlfr: Legends

Skulváði challenges Fossiker in ‘the simple game’1 to win a compass sought after by Sultans

They faced the cups. They sowed.
They winnowed. Four cards moved.
They tilled. Amulets danced.
Hunter drew. The Wolf dodged.
Less is more. More too much.
Eyes faced north. Eyes faced south.
Flat stones shimmied. Stacks skipped.
Still cups yawned. Stocks grew deep.

The Foe’s till2 sat. Varg sowed.
Spears’ din-3 sweller claimed. Ash4 sat.
Witch boom-wheels5 spun. Ash slept.
Hogni’s Maid yawned.6 Ash dreamt.
Oak fed Grid’s steed. Varg rode.7
Shield flourished.8 Seeds sprouted.
Point-crash-urger stood.9 Stand.
Guards rubbed their beards.10 Time aged.

Brigand-spy11 moved. He broke.
Bush-grinner12 prowled. Trees13 sighed.
Terror-homes14 heaved. Targes15 clinked.
Tilled cards stood. Seed-lines slept.
Hurdles16 dipped. Hunter aimed.
Hail bound north. Sun swept south.
He swiped hone-rods.17 She swerved.
He scooped swiftly. They tied.

Battles resumed. Stems18 leaned.
Net-bands19 emptied. Cards swam.
She reaped Third. Second bared.
Wolf struck First. Hunter paused.20
He was ring-short.21 She reigned.
Each had gained. No side lost.
Wolf played Sixth. Huntsman closed.
Prey’s Third sowed three. They tied.

Four fed each field. Crows sat.
Troopman scooped. His fist filled.22
He played the foe. He charged.
The wind soured. Smoke blew.
Strong ice slipped.23 Storm-Njörðr24 tripped.
Straits-darts25 plunged. Troll-wives26 laughed.
Skuld reaped Sixth. One seed stood.
She played it. Birch was snagged.

Wolf led by one. Winds rose.
One well dried. Fifth grew ten.
Always move east. Look west.
Fear north winds.27 Watch Muspell.28
Third sowed four. Varg held Boar.29
Skuld played Fifth. Úrðr stayed put.30
The forest grew. Eleven.31
Mowed field flattened. Seven.32

Sixth sowed one. Seeds dispersed.
So Skuld charged. Úrðr was held.
Second reaped.33 Sixth bloomed one.
Skier34 skidded. Planks sank.
Now came the rout. Wolf barked.
Fifth sowed its two. Oak ripped.
Planks35 strewed. Vain were rallies.
Claws doubled.36 And one to spare.

Varg’s Sixth sowed one. Spears lay.37
Thane strode. He gained three arms.38
He skied slopes. Then he skid.
Skuld’s Sixth cribbed one. First hugged six.
Both cups played. Oak was felled.
Thick woods closed in. Frost ran.
West moon rose. One rose tall.
Wolves doubled. Shadows grew.39

More storms brewed. Queen Skuld cloaked.
Oak mossed. Her Sixth sowed one.
Torn mail ran. Archer’s Fourth sowed.
Fogs lifted. Skuld thundered.
Third strew well. Three faced three.
Her Third stared. His Fourth cringed.
Varg ran free. Fangs were bared.
Hunter’s tracks slipped. Wolf grinned.

From Sixth rose one. Woods closed.
From Fourth rose two. Sky roared.
Carried split.40 Tops toppled.41
Wolf howled. Hunter turned prey.
Troll-wife42 tilled. Ván’s fields grew.
From Sixth came one. Fifth sowed two.
Sixth’s belly swelled. One birthed.
Thane cut fogs. Cattle bayed.

Hliðr43 was muddied. He stalked.
His cup held five. Wolf smirked.
Three moves were hers. She grinned.
Boar starved. One move was his.44
She sowed First’s two. Sun shone.
Second’s Three tilled. Trees bloomed.
No score scored.45 He was halved.
Queen’s First self-sowed. Serf bowed.46

Wyrd’s box closed. Wins were hers.
Wood-gold gleamed. Glass-stone glowed.
Troll-wife sang. Njörðr weighed stones.
Rome’s sun rose. Skuld’s coat shone.
Maniples danced. Helms bent.
More bets were planned. Úllr bowed.
Masked guests waited. All rode.
Gold ran. Járnsaxa47 won.


Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Suggestible like a Straw Pounded with a Rubber Mallet

Viewed through the sliding
fountains of mirage,
the anti-tines
of a widely spaced comb,
or just croaked out in panting
chest infection,
the subject
becomes loosely fibrous,
jellied,
clotted with air pockets,
a freshly painted
glamour
from some previous life,
delayed
in the mirrored panels
of subaqueous
self-similar
nightclubs:
The Babylonian,
The Babel,
The Electric Workers,
The Hamas,
The Golf View
Hotel-Motel,
The Twin Towers.
After getting drunk with Mum
in the wettexed kitchen,
you sound spongily
susceptible,
velveteened
for cynical command,
housebound
for the maestro’s brush-strokes.
So when the early career academic
with a volume problem
barks
that he
doesn’t follow your argument:
disconcerted,
not realising
he is an idiot,
you mistakenly
withdraw your submission.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

War on the Home Front

One. The Soldier: 6 June 2012.

Fallen into a war he cannot win
In conflict with sobriety
So long in the field his socks are filthy
Skin dry, caked in dirt and mapped in blood
He has not showered, cannot recall when he last washed
There’s much he can’t say of his battles
He must be coaxed into remembering all he wants to forget
It is the constant reverberation of explosions
Criticism bursting in his conscience
Truth exploding in showers of rage, until
Shell-shocked he admits to terror
Unable to confront the enemy face to face
At the bar damaging himself hand to hand
At war in no mans land is where he stands
Suffering combat fatigue, nodding off
In the trench of work, on the tram,
At the dinner table, exhaustion is a given
Sleep is delirium interrupted by bombardment
Constant as not thinking just slipping
Alive into nightmare battles where he wins
Only to be crushed along with his battered enemy
The soldiers’ lot does not end just because it is night
Apnoea the phantom strangler stalks the mind
Every endless eight-hour repose to wake to another day
He knows will be worse than the day now gone.

Two. The Chaplain: 6 June 2012.

He is a high priest of tales
Teller of tall stories
Indignant of non-believers
Intolerant of sceptics among his flock

Tears flood in the telling,
Drowning exhausted pilgrims
In the Nile River of contrition
Fake myth that it is, it works

On the alter of alcohol
He sacrifices sobriety
In rituals of mumbled jumbo
He requires fear not belief

He knows he too fights a war trapped
Within a doctrine of deceit and cunning
He is more sinner than sinned, for all he prays
His prayers will not fill the empty pews.

Three. The Spy: 6 June 2012.

The double agent cannot forget
His duplicity but at least
He never offers up information
It has to be dragged out
His supporters he believes
Are enemies in disguise
He lives behind his iron curtain
Letting his puppet life a free hand
After all it is only play
In a game of make believe
You make yourself believe, to be
Whoever you need to be today
To cover your real mission
To find a message in a bottle
Kidding your self
It is a skill that comes naturally
And if there are no witnesses
Who is there to deny your present identity?
Who you will betray depends
On who comes close to unveiling your deceit!
You are the spy and you must betray
Those closest who will unmask your shot eyes
Any who expose your fatty liver, swollen belly
Exposed an agent of your own demise
By the compulsion to lie under your
Disguise you pretend is the truth.

Four. M.I.A: 6 June 2012.

It is the ones who cannot get over
You not coming home
Night after night the fretting
Bloody imagination playing merry hell
Scenarios of every possible way he went
The women and children statistics
The men listed as missing in action at the pub

The real truth of his war is old news
It is hard to help, offer ground support
Widows and orphans, brothers and sisters, friends
Who know in their bones one bad moment
Is all it will take to hear the news
You have been expecting ever since his war began
He is not coming home from the front bar

Damaged beyond sense and cursed to live
Brain shot to pieces toasting at the tap
Liver and Heart suffocating under layers of fat
He’s home but missing in action
Missing the point wishing he were dead
And he would end his mission if he could
Think one thought through to the end.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

The Altercation but

Prelude:

Is it really true that one can’t change?

said Oscar Wilde, whose ode to metamorphosis got stuck

in the rot of a painting, while the youth

stood with features smooth as the beginning.

Chorus:

Fitzroy, Melbourne, the kind of strip that strips everyone down, right to the bone.

A ute, a traveller, and no way home.

Traveller:
What was a ute doing in Fitzroy? Hadn’t they cleaned this place up?

Chorus:

A traveller pulled by a rope of longing. Scrap that. She had no control.

The payload: a swarm of blue puppies, black spots turning eyes into chasms.

Their mother lying snout to floor. Her teats, ten props abandoned.

She dipped one hand over the edge. She did. The ute squeaked.

Traveller:

What am I doing?

Chorus:

A question she didn’t ask. We were there:

the mew of the puppies wriggling over one another.

Their necks tied to the floor. A series of black chains.

A rusted bolt. A medusa of pups we thought.

The mother doing nothing. Was she stoned?

Stand back, we said.

Too late, a melee of tongues and she was over, the traveller,

over the back, frolicking in her own

what? Mad max trip?

Or did she believe she was Actaeon,

testing the fidelity of the hounds?

Traveller:

What was it about this place? It was nothing. It just propelled people.

Like the way the sun, weak from winter, got taken over by a man

whose thick shadow I now wore.

Man:

What do you think you’re doin’?

Hands off the dogs.

Hands off.

Chorus:

She turned, smiling, as if it was a joke, as if she would see someone she knew.

The shadow shook his head. She was the type

he could see right through.

Man:

They’re farm dogs.

Traveller:

They’re puppies.

Man:

They’re farm dogs.

Traveller:

But it’s just.

Man:

Don’t touch ’em, right. Now git out now. Git.

Chorus:

She picked up the wronged hand with her right and removed it to her side. She slipped out of the ute. The rust fair sliced her in half.

The puppies swooned in their chains.

Traveller:

But I have one at home.

Chorus

She should stop

Man:

These here, right, are farm dogs.

Chorus:

He spat. He did. The length of the street seemed to rip

from its spine, torn like so no-one could see. She faced the shadow. He in his hat,

the things below brimmed in darkness.

She thought she saw a mouth, but it could have been a scab.

I’m guilty, she thought.

Man:

Hands off the dogs.

Chorus:

Though they were (we checked).

Traveller:

Why hadn’t I changed? All this time away and I get cracked up by a ute.

As if my home was some imaginary farm. As if my soul had been swapped

for a few foreign coins, and down here, in some wallet, my face could be burning.

Chorus:

It’s doubtful. In any case she fled, as travellers do, the scene went on without her.

We were there, we took a statement:

Man’s Statement:

She was as dumb as any city, I swear

that’s what I thought.

I scratched my hat. The day could wait.

I had saved a seat in the café and there would be time to savour it.

I mean, the bit about the farm dogs.

And the bit about the ute.

Chorus:

A truly cunning creature, man

Aristophanes’ birds once sang.

Some thwart the gods, others their husbands,

but this man picks out strangers:

all cunning for cunning’s sake.

Wait, we swear, one more thing …

Man:

The altercation but

that was truth.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Was Death Too Good for Me?

‘A salesman is got to dream, boy’ … Arthur Miller: Death of a Salesman

I offered no resistance
for I went without a struggle;
I was high and dry and stranded,
no commitments left to juggle.

The Board convened a meeting
with the CEO’s permission—
forward estimates in tatters,
there could be no intercession.

I offered no resistance when they
touched me on the shoulder,
saying, ‘Sorry but we’ll have to let you go—
markets weaken; banks are bolder,

don’t you know?’ So I went without
a struggle, disconnected from that day.
And cleared my desk of flotsam,
though abundant jetsam lay.

Purloined some storage boxes,
put the in-tray with the out-tray
and my tea mug in the trash. Just
photos of my loved ones took away.

I offered no resistance
when security came calling,
saying, ‘Today’s no time for stalling
as the shades of night are falling.’

So they marched me to the exit
and things were looking grim,
when up and spoke the doorman,
his guard dog close beside him:

‘Come, lad. For two pennies
I will ferry you t’other side
of town!’ I went without a struggle.
He seemed a kindly guide,

so I offered no resistance.
‘I’ve helped plenty here to cross.’
I knew he meant his river trip
might console me for my loss.

As I lingered in the gloaming,
a thought was slowly shaping,
(for I went without a struggle)
so from what was I escaping?

And those I’d left behind me,
always fawning to the bosses,
were they sorry for my going
or rejoicing at my losses?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

The Lifeguard, part 7

A buzzing in the ears as if bees
were swarming in my thoughts

or as if my head had become
a clearing in the forest

filled with the never-too-late serenades
of cicadas at summer’s end

makes me long for the gritty obscurity
of the west’s waves

or the suave silence of eastern lagoons
through which pouting fish

mutely swim. On the other hand,
if I listen carefully enough

to the sound of my own listening,
I might eventually hear something.

The hum of longing seems to fade at last
into a kind of aural impasto,

thick and bland, without apparent surface
but also without depth.

Neither meniscus nor void, without perspective,
not flat and not profound,

without extent or distance, not able to be touched
and incapable of penetration,

not flattened so as to stack up the shoreline,
the sea, the salty spume, the sky,

but not tricked out as a mirrored infinity
or a beach-walk into the never-never,

neither free nor necessary,
not imaginary and not a law of nature,

not spirit, not matter, without colour
but not the whiteness of all colour,

not abstract, not phenomenal,
not even the kind of paradox

that would let me end this
hapless catalogue, not ‘a jar’

both round and empty that might make
the wilderness gather itself

around a hollow core of form, nothing like that,
nothing like ‘a long-legged fly’

walking lightly on water
as a metaphor for the mind

moving across the surface of silence,
nothing like that –

so what am I saying? That this may be
the sound of consciousness?

But how, then, to imagine the silence
of oblivion, a kind of oxymoron,

since there can be no silence
where its opposite doesn’t equally prevail,

the waterlogged yells of those
whose upraised arms

mark places where the frothing rip
drags forests of kelp

in the direction of shipwrecks
whose phosphorescent ribs

flicker above their beds of black iron-sand,
or the hilarious shrieks

of revellers impacting
on the dawn-flushed harbour?

Yes, this could be the no-sound no-silence
of oblivion, but what

would I know? It’s the busy world
that sits outside my window

as if across a table
with wine and food on it.

Indifferent to the buzzing in my ears,
asking only that I listen and respond,

the world tells me stories.
That car whose windscreen glints across the bay

has a sad man in it. That yacht whose bow
pecks the wrinkled harbour

will still be tethered when
the next tide turns. The squawky sound

of talkback radio seems to come
from a patch of sunlight

or from the cat that basks there.
I want to call out to my lifeguards,

the one who watches my hope
flailing at the rip, the other

incurious as I loll in dismay:
Over here, guys. Find a seat. Fill a glass.

Help yourselves. Has anyone told you
what a great job you do?

It’s never too late. But listen to that.
You’re not going to believe it.

Tell me, friends –
what does that sound like to you?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

A Line from Joseph McCarthy

The equilibrium position
shifts. Energy is given off.
Can salsa eat through the
bars of a prison cell? Such

considerations are far from
rare in Russian jails. The
topic also comes up during
the “dark ages” of the web,

shaping the policy of early
deployment & the etiquette
for military weddings. He
searches for perfection in

both swordsmanship &
consciousness. We both
have blackberries with
data plans. Ensure your

settings allow the page
content to update after the
initial load. Are the bride’s
parents still responsible?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

The Auction

Sometimes it seems we were brought here only to mourn
–That all our happiness, our future plans,
Are fruits of the salesmen’s lure to ‘get us in’,
To have us bid more eagerly in an auction
Which (despite the glowing ads, the bonhomie
Of the salespersons and the boisterous auctioneer)
We will, in due course, find ourselves lamenting:
‘This fabulous dwelling! Those rooms, the views!’
Appear as mocking echoes to us as we finally drive away,
Outbid by younger buyers …
It’s then we feel
Regret for ever daring, once, to suppose
We could out-bid futurity and stay
Forever in this mansion made of clay.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Two Poems by Ricardo M. de Ungria

The two poems here are my most recent productions, written when I was winding up my commitments as bureaucrat and testing again the much-missed pool of ink for living lines and resonant images. My concerns here are countrified and rural, more natural and airier, and unwilling to prove anything to the world out there of social media.

‘Continuing Love’ and ‘A Kink of Burning’ were written for Agnes Locsin, who turned them into dance. The former was featured in her tribute to her mother Carmen some four years before her death in 2011. It was a mini biography of Mrs. Locsin as told to me by Agnes. The latter had a stanza translated into Filipino and also featured in her latest work ‘Dahon: Ikalawang Galaw’ (‘Leaf: Second Movement’) early this year. The poems are therefore about death and life and art and woman and creation, and the energies of natural elements around us that will outlive our shining human moments — themes that continue to fascinate me since I first started to write as a boy with a broken heart.

Continuing Love
Written for the Agnes Locsin dance A Love Story, in honour of Carmen D. Locsin

1.
From thick vines hung from trees
let go by hands,
from rocks by the banks
crammed with coiled springs for wet feet—
it is all wings and arcs 
cleaving wild air 
into the cool waters of Mintal river.
Loose planks bridge here 
to nowhere shakily.
Towers of unseen worlds rise, 
built tale upon tall tale.
From treetops where footraces ended, 
the earth is more than grass
and clods of dirt—instead, a wide bilao
of hills and mountains, rivers
and houses and trees trees trees!
The sky is more than a roof 
if you pry the branches apart.
God lives also in the trees,
and the leaves breathe with him.
No other school teaches that.

2.
Of all the fruits and flowers 
and fish and fowl
that take life from the land
and the waters and the air
from Mintal to Calinan
and beyond to Marilog,
and even to Silay and Iloilo,
none turns the day around quicker
to its point of lightness and heat 
than the sweetness without
husk or shoreline that is
human love.
Love the leap in the air
without shadows 
over walls and trees and craters
torn open by bombs.
Love the stroke of midnight and fire 
announcing orchids
ahead of bicycles and breasts. Love
keeps the hands of dreams warm
in all directions. Love 
the stillness that won’t stay still.
Or slip away 
like a ship in the night. Love 
be still. 
	
3.
Caught in their own melodies of growth
and yearnings, 
they move apart and out
to come into their own—
the living forms in the dance and the garden, 
and the children, marking time 
on a tightwire, eventually unheavened
under all kinds of weather
and sleep. Meanwhile,
they are flung open to receive
lessons pried out of the rock
of astonishments
and the words that pile up
without end
on the way to school and
later, work.

4.
The hues and slowburn of sweetness 
flush in one durian fruit;
the sure sail and dip of 
eagle wingtip, deadly swoop, 
and rip and tug of beak;
surge of fish and leap of cat; 
pull and push of root and treetop; 
burst of sap spiraling
inside trees and leaves and shells;
ebb and tiderush, rot of bones
and stars—
                  so too
in the flex and swing, 
bend, stretch, twist
to near cracking, slack and
spring and intimations of
the body pinned by pain
and drip of death, 
or wet with anguished joy,
lurk of hope, laughter shared
and emptiness. 
                         Surface
tensions bruised by beauty
brief. 
         Rippling.
                        Tingle 
in the soul between
measure and
                      release.

Here shall be space 
for spiriting forms 
of loss and love and longings
into their human likeness
and reach,
to teach the body
praise, prayer, possibility.
                     Come, speak 
the speech of the body,
and pass on the dance. 

5.
Harder on the heart is 
the going away than being gone.
Being gone has walked through walls
and changed the wine to water—and now
the wall can break itself down
to dust and spilled water
dry up without smoke.
Going away shrinks all windows and doors 
to the size of the unspoken.
A life gathers into a face before us, 
and starts to close its eyes.
In the dimming light 
we stand as on a jolt 
of tide-sucked sand,
our balance shifted, 
our own face flush with the breath
slipped out of the one becalmed.
Then, the one thing left to do, 
the only tender thing to do, 
beyond the anger and consent,
moving to its own secret music and
not made smaller by pain,
is to climb up God’s tree
and nibble on her breath, 
or get the broom and sweep
without thought
or excitation
the shadow rolled out
on the hospital floor 
tile by square 
white tile.

6.
God lives in trees and speaks 
the languages of winds,
shadows, light, laughter.
Always the birds bring in new seeds
and the waves new water—as if
they have not done that before, as if
they had not always done that 
as before, as if they were not here 
in the beginning after all. 
New buds flower, dry up, and drop
from their stems. Suddenly,
a big shadow is upon us, and in a snap
the truck moves on and light springs back
on old familiars.
Frisky little bodies plunge into the water 
and the waters receive them.
The work of memories and affections 
is the work of water, earth, and fire.
Were we where we were, 
or will we be where we’ll be?
A hand takes us, and we take the hand.
We feel the earth push back our feet, 
and we move on
to feed the birds, or watch
the goldfish breathe out ripples
on the surface of the dug-out pond.
A Kink of Burning

1.
Breath of wings. Sighing of lovers
lost to the winds. Sigh of the wind then. 
Breath unspoken. About to speak. 
No mouth to word dead loves,
                                    only—listen! 
A premonition taking wing 
                                           bigger than trees. 
Through spires of skylight
                                           —through treetops
—through bird tongues swimming on wakened leaves. 
The dead cling to music and the rains come. 
Breath on ears tingling. Supernal. Breath of dead loves.

2.
Water jets down bald mountains
and wraps the fevered earth with thick muddy blankets.

3.
Among the morning branches a kingfisher— 
Is it? Was it? On a leaf a butterfly 
Stunned by the wildest flowers 
Of faith and desire. Therefore: 
                                                 Feeling
is all that remains
at the back of the head when no one is looking.  
Weightless with lost names
And the fish-breath of solitudes.

4.
Forgetting, then, the last ablution.
Prayers drift past the blooming lotuses
Like ashes from some unsmothered fire
Groping for various shapes of desire.
A wild river flows up past trees still standing,
past words that have given up on words.

5.
A pair of long-parted lovers
recovered to each other’s attentions,
breathe a nakedness and a body 
to the moon in their minds. 
They find the fullness of longing
shot through with holes, 
and its emptiness filling up the scooping hands. 
Shorn of old obligations and allegiance 
that invaded romance not just once,
they lick each other’s thighs, nipples and breasts 
without the faithful words I love I love I love.
Themselves unmoving like roots 	
In each other’s arms, yet
Moving past names and renamings 
Of old resentments and judgments,
they cleave to each other without memory or hope, 
creating without god a sweetness 
inextinguishable and tender
the way a feather of fire holds on to fire
and takes wing, blazing with singing.
Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Three Poems by Francisco Guevara

More than a page’s capacity to document how fact took place, I am interested in the way sound can become revolutionary inasmuch as the word ‘revolution’ asserts the necessary paradox of motion in its etymology. As revolution implicates the tension between old and new, the force of its rupture is also present in our sense of the world: one’s gravity, the passing of time and our states of being here.

I am interested in the way etymology creates the circumstances of its word’s failure, and yet it makes language impartable. I am interested in thinking through revolution in order to think about the productive (read: ethical) implications of participating in the newness of rupture with the truss of tradition while operating in the present progressive. In these poems, I wished to unsettle the addresses of Adam and ‘I’ in order to acoustically render the experience of feeling at home in them.

There was the climate

lingering on: the business of bearing
mymy my myan original, drying leaf's

last flutter. What Adam swept during
a pretense of a rose is—or,     my

rendered elastic what he had hoped
mym y  to be another immovable hue.

For natural read his voted-on sense for
 m y “what stays & away.” So far from

feigning Adam & a pavement, ever after
its symphony scored a crowd: do you

remember your peopled to a tree's?  my
Do you remember the unaccounted,

braced-for apology ahead?    my
In the humdrum ocean that stole you?

Ha, ha, ha

Adam dirtied refusal,
soiled his crumpled letterhead

a lesser suite. Shook one's else, your etheric “we shook ourselves with” when
he bore an oak branch to bloat A passage deadened enough to gag. Eyes gravity-
fed with a tick-tocking heart, with what the room
couldn't stand & another for. Dearest Adam arresting with tongues, couldn't you awe
your difference between? Your arterial, you're looking over one's
shoulder for one's wanting embraced. Your arterial we shook
ourselves with: his assembly lined & sworn flaw thrown off what he counts and climbs
On the evenings of November

I harvested silence for an I that was 
my voyeur after having looked out 
of a skyscraper enough to feel at home 
in the lie of falling for the ground 

I couldn’t see. In the sense of storms 
betrayed by their names’ passing, 
I returned to transcribe a skyline 
that was more a seabed upon a traffic 

light’s sense of keeping time against 
a street against the trial in every sentence 
sighed as that storm struck, and her haze 
misread for dusk rendered the guilt 

I felt from looking away in order 
to think myself into trafficking wherever 
one was raised and therefore became 
December in the spirit of a cigarette, 

yet, perhaps, to begin without having to be 
in a room trembling from trains passing, 
nay, forging through and through a key 
to praise forests there in the uppercase, 

and every other page waiting for an ark 
to sail a home away from the haunting I was 
after I awoke drenched enough to mimic 
newness by foot without doubling back 

for every shadow caught inside another 
shadow’s strain, and after hours soiled from 
calling it work, the rot I incurred until 
a flood’s current could finally return me.
Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Four Poems by Marc Gaba

I am an artist who loves lines.

Vanitas

at the speed of light he turned no further 
were we once an inviolate sorrow, 
an eyeful of apologies, too quick, or late enough in the instant 
to recoil from absence the consensus of cells 
that felt you 
leave with them as I consent to owe you, 
I owned who, I sang you my 
listening my lyric my Eurydice—forge 
the splash of my signature across any song any shade there mouths, 
the old gods—silt-handed with gossip still and holding 
their ends from the end as in the speed of sound she went free
Vanitas

“I was named so similar others
echo like yours spells through

back against the flash
of an origin that means

something, not a man
held it and instead

as a stain in a landscape is

shallow, it was shallow
in the depth of the time it

was given, and it called.”

Vanitas









And when it had done explaining the dream—reached me, wordless beside the morning.

Vanitas





                                             what joy can error
                                             disprove down to source
     its long life in the mirror                                       To myself last night I said my own name
                                                                                      to hear my voice
                             sound                          like someone
                                       stripped of choice like a knife
                                                agleam with a few eyes
                                                                                     Sheathe it now your body must do where I
never thought to close, could open the open mirror’s
                                                                                      single eye                    its radiant mouth
                                                        listening to neither side of it                    equal
                                                                                      a lie, now                    where faces have no back
Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Three Poems by Marjorie Evasco

From my first collection, Dreamweavers, to the new work in two forthcoming collections, It is time to come home and Fishes of light / Peces de luz (with Cuban poet Alex Fleites), I continue to be fascinated by the tension between finding a way of saying what needs to be said, and finding spaces in the work where silence must be kept. Crafting a poem is, for me, exploring a musical configuration. And my main instrument is the human voice (or the voices I hear), and its (their) capacity for aural inflections and finely calibrated tones to render the textures of a complex human experience.

After I re-learned my mother tongue Cebuano, the possibilities and range of voices (per-sonae) expanded, enriched by and rooted in two different cultural/literary traditions. As a bilingual poet in the Philippines, I take pride in being able to drink from two wellsprings. In my university training in English, I found deep resonances in poems that explored a point, argued for or against it, and yet kept completely open to astonishment. Thus, I loved the discipline of the sonnets of Shakespeare and Donne, the vision of Blake, Whitman and Dickinson. In the Cebuano literary tradition, I revelled in the ‘Bisdak’ (Bisayang Daku) wit of the riddles and ditties, the melisma of the sonanoy of Fernando Buyser, and the ironic humor in the poems of Tem Adlawan, Pantaleon Auman, Rene Amper, Adonis Dorado, Myke Obenieta and Cora Almerino, among others.

As a translator of poetry from English into Cebuano, and lately from Spanish to English or Cebuano, I have deepened my respect for the intrinsic untranslatability of a poem’s musical body. Its substance can only be reshaped in another language, and hopefully, if the translation is any good, it can evoke the power of its sensibility (which is the musical core of the poem’s mind). This is how I read and was influenced early on in my writing by the sensibility of the Chinese T’ang and Japanese Heian poets translated into English.

A poem’s heart cares for and attends to its own mind and strives to sing the old stories in the face of pressures wrought in the world/s we live in, at this particular time, in this specific place. What W.B. Yeats said in ‘The Second Coming’, that ‘things fall apart; the centre cannot hold,’ predicted a postmodern problem that I now experience, on a daily basis, in the Philippines. The poems I write (when I can steal time from the daily urgencies of making a living) are spaces for making momentary sense of the senselessness I have to live with and endure. They are tentative processes towards imagining some answers, or even more questions, in what is an evolving and continually changing and transient inner environment.

Sagada Stills
IN  A     F  L  O  A  T  I  N  G     WORLD

If with words							                               If with images

	    I									                             You

                                                          could catch

on photographic film						                          on silk paper 

                                                           a likeness

of You											                      of Me

                                                           in Sagada

I would have 								                      You would have

                                                to sit a thousand years

                                                with master of austere

	  Light									                    Measure

	  Masferré								                    Shikibu


                                                  to learn the process


of rendering									                    of staining

     Silence									                        Sound

For Maria Kodama’s Other Borges
						
                                        'For the person that you will be,
                                                      whom perhaps I might not understand.'
                                                      - Jorge Luis Borges, Inscripción
						                         
I. Her labyrinth

A fortnight after you died, 
I sang your black bones back 
to shape. 
     In the silence I trusted 
the dark from whence 	
      you came. 

Now, you are a figure conjured up 
with light on this page, 
       mere trick 
of shadows. 
   Who are you, Poet?  
Whose god can breathe you back 
to flesh?

II. Orpheus Falls

Who has not heard the Poet’s lament
for one descended into dream’s dark
stairs?  
     Who has not heard the gods’
admonition, given with knowing smile—
Do not look back—
   last trick to play
on the body’s lighted book of memory?

Every single instance, the lover fails,
falls, 
quick to usher the sought-after
back to the surface of time. He sings
to her, “Ascend with me!”—
               yet in a 
moment’s breathlessness, hers, he 
looks back and she’s undone, 
charred bones 
and ash.

III. Dream of the Waterclock
					
                                        'All those things were made perfectly clear
                                                      so that our hands could meet.'
                                                      -Jorge Luis Borges, Las Causas

This is the symphony’s last movement
dripping in the old waterclock.
For each drop of water—in the manner
of the blind poet—I offer you seven 
dreams: 
           1) hush of bamboo leaves 
before the onslaught of storm winds;
					                      2) scent
of a golden pollen’s flight after a wild
bee danced the yellow roses;
			             3) first sheaf of rice 
from the first season’s harvest after 
the last typhoon;
                     4) fishing boats on the beach,
dawn silvering the catch in the nets;
5) threshold of sunset through which
my thoughts traverse to the morning
side of the world; 
   	   6) last drop of black ink
from the calligrapher’s brush on silk,
on which is completed the release
of the beloved from death;
                         7) two hands folded,
fingertips lightly touching my forehead
in timeless greeting, as if you’re here
with me. Palpable, 
real.
Birds of Paradise
after Women with birds of paradise, by Anita Magsaysay-Ho, oil on canvas, 1982

Their eyes are black slits against 
Gold of their burnished skin this side 
of morning. They do not shatter silence
with chatter of the marketplace.

Only their hands speak of the task,
gathering the day’s burden of beauty:
birds of paradise singing in tongues,
wings spread over and between

their heads, a feast of burning angels.
The youngest among them bends down 
deepest into herself, wrapping the green
stems in a second skin against breaking. 

The night before, she had watched the sea
while the gravid moon rose red as her belly.
She tore off her white bandana and broke
into the waters, her black seagrass hair dis-

entangling, waves hissing low ‘let be, let go!’
Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Three Poems by Mabi David

These poems are from an unpublished chapbook entitled Spleen. The poems in my two previous books have been called ‘detached’ and ‘objective.’ Thus, when I wrote these poems, I wanted to have it out with strong emotions and to explore (if not come to terms with) this seeming unease with overt sentiment. I also wondered if dropping one’s guard has a place in poetry. Two opposing forces animate the poems in the collection: a sitting figure and the wind. I am usually interested in historical subject formation in poetry, and Spleen is a clear departure from that. But I enjoyed writing these poems nonetheless.

Sitting Poem, 18

Blinding light, cold 
wind even in summer.
The lake below is still: 
polish of cut glass, silver
nourish of indifference.

I have come here 
to sit and wait 
all day, years, sentinel 
to any sly arrival.

Not scratching, not hungry 
nor succumbing, not feeling,
not bereft, not longing, not moving. 
Air and sun pressing against strain.

The hot sheet of noon 
shivering into afternoons. 

The world turning 
white; no horizon. 

Breeze catching voices from afar
chastens by subtle reminders. O

that my life may not always be this.
More time, looming shadows. Dusk 
darkly yielding another setting, disfiguring
a landscape I’ve come to know, here
stooping, here gloaming, here indigo.

Toy

And because I’d gone ahead and done
the unthinkable, I want to know

what else I won’t ever do. I go ahead
and do that too. I think of a thing or two

the mere thought of which makes me 
retch: I do it. And do it

until the idea of me and my turns 
silly, toy, being built a certain way 

has little truth, until I get to the bottom 
of where I came undone and keep at it

until the hurt it gives gets good
and the good I give gets animal.
Night Breeze

It is the swell of hours entering, slow
It is the fumble of warm breath and blur

Particularless interiors, sung equations,
The soul shimmying into a cathedral
Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Three Poems by Conchitina Cruz

The poems I am working on these days defer to the impulse to archive and collect. Because of my interest in the collision of apparently objective methods of documentation and an explicitly idiosyncratic subjectivity, my poems employ the alphabet, the catalogue, the timeline, the diagram and the dictionary as forms. I seem to be in the middle of compiling a voluminous encyclopedia of ephemera, driven by a still un-rationalised desire to convert the perishable to permanent, to salvage the seemingly disposable from disappearance and erasure. I am interested in aggressively treating words and sentences as singular units of composition, polyvalent and prone to different registers depending on that which they are in proximity to. In other words, I am extremely attached to the act of enumeration.

Exhibition Notes

At six I lost my first watch and gave up on biking. At eight I wanted a cow and a fridge to put the cow’s food in, and also a music box. At thirteen I broke a tooth in a dream and for days tapped each tooth in my mouth with my tongue, searching for cracks. At seventeen I lived with three strangers and at twenty-one I got chicken pox exactly two weeks before graduation. I prefer beer to wine. I prefer a couch to a chaise longue. I prefer landmarks to street signs. I prefer to say perhaps rather than maybe, which perhaps makes me sound officious, although I hope this is not the case. I like to watch horse races and figure skaters. I like not being good friends with my neighbors. When in the shower, I sing. When afflicted with a pain I have no name for, I sleep it off. I cry over migraines and missed deadlines. I would rather rent for life than be responsible for a house. I would rather spend a weekend up in the mountains than in the city, but this was not always so. I look forward to plane rides, if they are less than ten hours long. On trips I prefer to stay in the hotel and read books, often about the place I am visiting. I like to sit in the lobby and take pictures of window views. I do not mind asking strangers for directions. I do not get upset when the directions turn out to be unreliable. I do not think twice about spending money on books, but I tend to hold off on buying a bag of potato chips, no matter how intriguing the flavor. Sometimes, in my office, I choose not to answer the knock at the door, despite its persistence. I pretend I am asleep, or simply not there. I find turnstiles and carousels reassuring. I think photographs of shadows are inevitably elegant. There were years when I signed my name as well as the date and place of purchase in every book I bought, and there were years I did not. There were years I recorded in my journals and there were years I did not. I enjoy sitting in a coffee shop and listening to the talk at the next table, but I am annoyed when I tell my companion a joke and find the man at the next table laughing. I cannot look at a painting without reading its title first. I feel awkward making the sign of the cross. I feel compelled to write words with my index finger on dusty surfaces. I do not smoke pot if there is no one in the room I would like to sleep with. Mannequins make me nervous, as do poorly ventilated diners. I am always a little disappointed when the person I am calling picks up the phone. I have a hard time watching movies with scenes of rape and torture in them. I would rather not have a conversation begin with “We need to talk,” although experience has taught me that what follows is not necessarily terrible news. There are two or three things in my life that I regret. I am pro-choice but am amenable to a reproductive health law that excludes abortion. I am embarrassed to belong to one of two countries in the world with no divorce law. I read the news after I read the classifieds. I despise cops and evangelists. I can live without beauty pageants, although I find myself keeping the television on long enough to see the evening gown portion. Sometimes, alone in a restaurant, I feel obliged to finish my food quickly if there are others waiting to be seated. I stay away from people who hand out flyers. I stop in front of pet shops when rabbits and birds are on display. I compare prices. I make lists. I return by the due date. I think it is better to walk in the middle of the street and get hit by a car than to walk on a dark sidewalk and get mugged. I think a cab with a rosary hanging from its rearview mirror is safer to ride in than a cab without it. I have a hard time evading small talk. I have fallen down a flight of stairs twice. I have watched a group of men smash a car with lead pipes. I have stood on top of a mountain in one country to view the mountains of another. I have had sex in ten countries across four continents. I have been kissed inappropriately by a priest. When I am bewildered I think of olive trees half my size which I must have seen on a trip long ago or merely read about. When I am unnerved I recite the phone numbers I know by heart and am relieved that I still know them. There are two or three things I have done that I must apologize for. I sleep by myself on the right side of a double bed. I sleep with the lights off, and by this I mean I sleep with the light from the lamppost outside my window. When a man is in bed with me I leave the cat outside and ignore its meowing by the door. When a man is in bed with me I say screw even when make love is a distinct possibility. There were years I spent filled with road rage and there were years I did not. There were years I wrote thank you notes and snacked on cheese and crackers and there were years I did not. I do not underestimate receptionists and security guards. I am more likely to pick up a book with a beautiful cover even if it is by an unknown author than a book with a hideous cover even if it is by an author I love. I think dictionaries are more reliable than novels. I think swimming pools are far more bearable than oceans. I forgive friends easily, but I am a ruthless critic of acquaintances. I am sometimes rendered speechless by indecision. Sometimes, on my way to work, I see myself walking across the street. I feel the urge to follow myself, but soon enough, I change my mind.




Signals

I took the amaretto to mean there was no beer in the house.

I took the bassline to mean a particular addressee was in the crowd.

I took the clairvoyant weather to mean I could dismiss your unappealing conclusions.

I took the dry run to mean the echo was unreliable.

I took the elevated appeal of allusions to mean the fever had no fangs.

I took your fury to mean there was grass in the basement.

I took the gelatinous substance to mean a diminished generosity toward herbivorous endeavors.

I took happiness to mean I had the right syllable in mind.

I took the initials to mean just leave the front door unlocked.

I took the jellyfish scuttling by the reef to mean the kleptomania was the least of my concerns.

I took the kiss to mean a potentially inconsequential lesson.

I took the lesion barely hidden by your sleeve to mean you had no wish to mimic the tragedies of your flawed heroines.

I took the marionette on the clothesline to mean there was hope for the unsuspecting neighbor.

I took no to mean it was the only answer.

I took the oppressive serendipity to mean that panic might or might not send us straight into an emergency.

I took the paprika to mean quiz the cook, not the gardener.

I took the imperious quill to mean the repetition was intentional.

I took the sly reference to mean the substitute had surpassed the preference.

I took the song to mean you took the necessary pill.

I took the tricky decimal to mean I should unsay the speech I made over dinner.

I took the unexpected unification to mean veer away from condescending middlemen.

I took the violinist’s lisp to mean it was imperative to wait in line.

I took the waiver to mean there was a xenophobe in the building.

I took the third x-ray to mean you had nothing more to lose.

I took the yapping from the room below to mean the token zorroing was a far more appropriate gesture.

I took the zero dangling from the headline to mean the aphorism was a spell in disguise.



Half an hour in the house of indecision or procrastination

ants
The cotton buds are attracting ants by the hundreds, they are almost flowers.

blinds
The blinds are behaving like piano keys at the mercy of an inebriated player. Or: the blinds are undulating like the sea on an uneventful summer day. Or: the blinds are shimmering like grass skirt of a woman scavenging for keys in a cavernous purse.

conundrum
Are there three illegal puppies yelping without let up in the apartment next door or just two?

electric fan
The dust clinging to the spokes of the fan spans several eras: The Era of the Apartment Devastated by Flood, The Era of Politically Incorrect yet Extremely Amusing Terms for Informal Settlers, and The Era of Citrus-Scented Cleaning Agents to Cover Up the Accidents of the Ailing Cat.

insight
Instant coffee with condensed milk is too pleasant to be thought of as making do.

history
There is nothing in the house that seems to have emerged from a grandmotherly chest inlaid with mother-of-pearl save for the stereoscope and the box of slides of pastoral scenes in turn-of- the-century India.

melodica
In lieu of the guitar left in the office. In lieu of the sorely missed cable subscription. In lieu of mid-week nights at the bar with unexplainably cheap margaritas, now closed for renovation.

note
The term you mean to use when you say threshed out is fleshed out.

shameful vanity
The studio photograph taken years ago to commemorate the shamelessly literary tattoo is languishing in a book bag from a forgettable conference.

wishful thinking
Today is hopefully not the day the landlady slips the electric bill under the door.

Posted in CENTRE HOLD | Tagged ,

Rims

[audio:http://cordite.org.au/audio/Rims.mp3|titles=Rims – Stu Hatton]

Ambient backing ‘126 Suburbs Neigbourhood Spring Evening Leaves Light Wind Kids Singing Chimes’ by freesoundrecordiss is licensed under creative commons attribution 3.0

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Transparent Things

The Travelling Poet

He said he was a travelling poet, once, but hadn’t written for years. He’d taken up truck driving because it made sense, providing transportation and raw material in one hit. But things didn’t go as well as expected. His poems soon degenerated into claustrophobic highway ballads, rig-oriented and despairing. The open roads perceived from within an oppressively confined space marked his psyche. His lyrics grew violent and fantastic. Their only audience was hitchhikers he picked up on empty freeways, grateful itinerants who sat through the rhythms of his lunatic rhyme-schemes with polite interest and sweating palms.

I wrote a volume called Murdered Hitchhikers, he said, which seemed to hold their attention. They purchased signed copies without fail. Eventually my little narratives were relayed back to me in rural outposts where poems have a tendency to flower into mythology. Then there were news reports about missing hitchhikers and blood stains and body parts. I heard my own compositions recited by reporters on dusty highways and eyewitnesses in four-wheel-drives and survivors in calming blankets. My poems had taken physical shape, micro-Frankensteins haunting the tar-streaked outback, killing and maiming and terrorising. Falconio was my tortured couplet, Milat my Man from Snowy River. By the time I was taken in for questioning I’d already decided: poetry was murder and truck driving is terrible for posture. I gave them both up for a pension.

When asked to recite one of his poems he declined, saying: You never know what might happen.

Romeo

Walking at night, I came, invariably, to a double-story mansion facing the esplanade, it’s garden glowing red and green with Christmas lights, no matter the season. My legs came alive, a throb for each kilometre travelled. The vigorous sea-air flooded my lungs and my heart leapt at being so near the object of my desire. When people were about – gardening or socialising or reading a book with wine glass in hand – I was furtive, a thin spectre flitting across the footpath, quickly observing the happenings within. More often I met with an empty street, which allowed me to leap the fence and skirt around the side of the house to a narrowing at the rear where the wall rose into a balcony. An accomplished climber, I’d then scale the trellis and gently pad to the balcony’s door. Each night I tested the lock, and each night I was disappointed. But I knew that one day soon the play would take a different turn. Each walk I took until then was of pious anticipation.

At the Theatre

A theatre group presented a one-act play every night. These plays usually went for a half an hour but would develop via repetition in a cyclical fashion as the night wore on. By midnight the script was redundant. Audience members were invited to shout the lines they’d heard repeated for several hours with slight modifications. Occasionally the participants deliberately distorted the line, provoking a radical change in plot direction, which sometimes led to near orgiastic chaos – violent outbursts, hooting, nudity. More often, the audience complied with the script unthinkingly, as though it spoke their own thoughts perfectly and even, in some cases, enacted their most intimate desires. For such an audience the play’s first cycle insinuated something indescribable, a sensibility they couldn’t quite grasp but which re-modelled itself subtly, over the course of the evening, until they recognised, at last, their inner lives being enacted on stage, to such an extent that when asked to participate they barely hesitated, as though they’d been performing all along and this later performance was merely the external depiction of a far grander narrative constantly evolving in their minds.

Transparent Things

I recall climbing the stairs of my apartment block only to discover that the door to my room had disappeared. In its place was a flawless wall. I kept climbing until I came to the top floor where another door stood ajar. I knocked but received no reply. The room was very small, like a prison cell. There was just a single lamplight on a desk near the window sill on the far side. Disordered jottings were scattered across the desktop. I picked up a scrap and read:

As he sat at his desk tapping the keyboard in this his confinement he
suddenly thought that something was missing although he knew not
what that something might be.

The room was a mess, books and scraps of paper strewn everywhere. A curtain separated one corner from the rest. Behind it: a grimy woolen rug and a clump of children’s clothes. In addition to the desk there were two chairs, a stained sofa and a thin-legged kitchen table. The room was practically a cupboard, but the furnishings suggested more than one tenant. I tried to imagine the lives led in that room.

A skeletal woman emerged from a secret passage beneath the rug. She was astonishingly thin and pale and began to pace back and forth, pulling at her hair in frustration. I apologised for intruding. She gave an impatient jerk of her head and continued pacing. Her dark eyes shot widely around, back-and-forth and side-to-side. I kept very still to avoid provocation. After some minutes the atmosphere became stifling and I asked permission to open the window. She stopped suddenly and stared at me wide-mouthed. I expected her to yell murder; instead she muttered something under her breath and went back to pacing. The window was nailed shut.

Minutes later, a young girl no more than nine years of age emerged from the same passageway beneath the rug with an even younger boy in tow. He was crying and shaking, as though he’d recently been beaten. The woman grabbed him by the hair and dragged him into the corner. ‘You stay there,’ she screeched, before doubling over in a coughing fit. The children were thin and dressed in outgrown clothes, without shoes or socks. Their hair was knotted and they stank. The little girl crept over to her brother and stroked his sobbing face. When the madwoman finished coughing she began pacing and pulling at her hair again. The girl watched her mother with deep attention, as though reading in her movements a hidden sign of what was to happen next. Her sunken eyes glittered with intelligence and alarm; her gaunt face expressed perfectly the horror of being subjected to another’s delirium; her skin seemed nearly transparent.

After watching this scene for a few minutes I was completely unsettled. I got down on my knees and begged the woman to be more sympathetic to the children. She glanced at me disdainfully and snorted, then proceeded to murmur ‘sympathetic’ over and over, as though it were a foreign word she hoped to memorise. At last a man crawled through the passage and looked around the room. He was elegantly-dressed but filthy, his hair uncombed and his face grimy. He smelled of stale beer and sweat, with a tang of vomit. The man’s eyes lingered over his children sadly. Then he proceeded to beat himself elaborately around the face and head before tearing at his ears. I was startled when the woman turned and addressed him by my name.

Posted in LEE MARVIN | Tagged ,

No, the System Did Not Work For Me

I landed among delusion, with a lag
and a dogsbody. I was hauled within a millimetre
of someone’s brown balaclava.
I was a deb in line with a litre of jackpots
holding a new key and a gypsy.
I blundered past the icing, the pioneer pasties
until it became confusing.
There was some mug serving vol-au-vents
in the event of an accident.
The dogsbody left for a two-up game back east
and though I wrote to the mug
there were questions about indemnities.
I couldn’t tell if the lag had the only weapon.
They looked like blackballs or something
you’d wear in an airlift. I did not lose
though the vortex was faulty
too many yes-men hamming it up
for too many yobbos. The dollars shook down
their own catastrophe. I became a debacle
in pearls with a litter of Jaffas. I dropped
the lucky cards
the horizon got shonky. I gave up crystals
and tea leaf methodologies. I could not lose
though the yardstick was dodgy.
It was a blast in the blunders.
And thanks for the bluffs.

Posted in LEE MARVIN | Tagged ,

Hindley Reverie

A lunch poem

Perhaps everyone drives round these blocks forever
as cafes get lost in the trawl of Hindley Street
these blocks, just to see something happen.
‘Adelaide’s No.1 Party Venue’, a kind of inroad
or airborne, the sound, lonely sputnik, hey there
you may arrive at The Woolshed, the all male review
what you may want, KFC, KBox, karaoke.
There’s also the art part amongst lunchtime squelching,
some Germans, a queen and his staffy, tapas, city stuff,
‘Playing Till Late’, and though you’re puzzled, you’ve intuited
from the beginning that Polites isn’t a health regime.

There’s paper scattered round, The Advertiser unreadable
the festival programs unreadable, nothing to do with
what goes on, like happy hour, sex work, making
a custom Tshirt, selling secondhand books,
scoffing schnitties, checking the phone — ‘needs and desires’
an oldfashioned textbook might say, probably still on a shelf
somewhere nearby.
                                 Should we be impressed
with the Fringe or Writers Week or 4 Coronas
for $20? While in Tempo there’s some sizzling going on
a burger, a meeting, everyone knows each other here –
well, not you, sweetheart, but, y’know, everyone …

A complete unknown could be perfect, so you can
hide from heat and conversation in the midst
without news or pretence with hero parking and a desert wind
in ‘the workshop of the mind’ as someone once said
too cutely, and all that’s missing is sea salt which should come
from the sea out of the west but refuses and so do you,
but not in a bad way, you have to think and move, nothing is still
even in a heatwave, it is a wave, all that pressure.

A caterer’s truck slams the gutter and anything’s possible
there’s nothing zen in that, existence moves on the waters
and on the sands, and if language made that up
it sounds as possible as whatever may be delivered
along Hindley Street, and, hey there, you might arrive
sometime, but it’s not so lonely in this space
these circles, these funny old corners.

Posted in LEE MARVIN | Tagged ,

From Here On

plans go diligently
to seed
salt / pepper sky
press timelapse
off bring
their plans to seed
still functioning
organs night comes
on you do
something
to or with it print
download email
a thermal they’re
called clouds
clanging brain
saying come over bring
the go board the
bin’s out
wednesday reigned
rained into ascot
vale negotiate
human plant
relations in
the suburbs in
the shade mood
stable music
playing the
latest framework out
to please doesn’t
look you in the face
four of them moving
towards electric light
falls on leaves
take flight won’t be
woken what
are you something
interesting
a cloud
clouds from here on
in

Posted in LEE MARVIN | Tagged ,

Trick Light

regard jusqu’à
set posture to be
admired for le
something the
empty place where
succulents were
where wallpaper
was intentional
ly harbouring we
go build le
quelquething
ubud harbour
alarm has a
plume held
a signal climbs
slides against
across last lanes
excused famous
rubber dusk
turning each
one negative
our couer
climb across
the shop floor
a car
still running
feels good
to pull weeds up
a weird cure
for something
gelding constant
light moving
down
these lines

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Notebook Poems I-IV

I

e-mail to the deep breaths department
five goodberries unsampled
the river brackish,
        or perhaps actual bracken

(slides around us)
like koi, not good eating

first taste of real life exclusion
                in small gloves

                couldn’t read the sandlewood fan codex

        lift both hands to fax home

politically incorrect across the fen
                sexist, but gorgeous
                        – your Elvis-face carpet

it’s old technology
so if they won’t re-make it
        in different materials
        we forget the prompts,
a telephone is mostly
                        more talking

I realise this is no way
to get the product division to notice me
hours spent gathering
        then fusing household objects:
bed-computer,
        mop-pan,
                a letterbox that is also a stapler
                        & a middle-child

when the time came to vote
        we bolted for the door

sent round the hat
for a smear campaign
targeting ferns
                – their floppy politics

swing a hammer into a fence post
                – mark out your patch, you always have

II

nice to see you
even in the cleaning aisle
        light a cigarette from the little pops
                                of window panes

you can lift up a piece of the road
to compressed dust; a packet of ovalteenies
                later your cordial spills on the sky

a cloud sticks to your shoulder
        which I follow between hills
where the shrubs have rusted

truck is floating carousel

                jonquil = petrol

full mouths change word shapes
        rain keeps you in
                keeps you hung over

someone takes a highlighter to the field
        & you imagine the aerial view

but looking at the thumbnails
        of the same trees making different shadows

(my school of photography
is get in the frame & get going)

        water rushes up to the waist

        lino-cut branches against the sky
different trees pool in the same shadow

III

his need to kick open trees
until the applause
makes me want to stay in bed

but a package of light arrived on my lap
                wrapped in a vine leaf

this is your
mediterranean plate

        old pretzel taken with a
                spout of liquor

kiss ‘head of a giant youth’
        in split white marble

set up shop in atrium
be bad at goodbyes
change your personality
        to suite your basin face

during a party the most action is in the smallest room

locked outside
the interior of the flat
(each separate component)

is exquisitely remembered
                                like all lost objects

later, thin coffee upon ecstatic entry
shaving tiles with a foam brick

you love that baby so you shorten its name
this is a well-known process
                but it does not work for everyone

nostalgia for your time as a node & earlier
living as a small, volcanic archipelago
how you covered the trackmarks of an about-turn

factory job involved a regular
        provision of sideways glances

bruises are such easy metaphors
        think of something else

what goes on at the tap during warm weather
2 pet guinea pigs, both named Philip

I did not know about this ‘shoe incident’
at the Institute of Hair and Aesthetics

IV

hot lunch eaten standing
wheeling your reservations up the manmade hill

the athletic djs sport cool tracksuits
olympic fly-over & are the royals in vogue now?

pour yourself a heart-starter
assume there’ll be English
                but feel bad about it

busy & lightly iced in the manuscript room
woman seeking bubbler
                crackle-glaze, impasto

minor scuffle on the digest
a granule of earnest disco
        that summer you became “political”
                        spent more time in the shade

away from the archives
        gutter-bird: “I like larking up kicks”

        muster a scoupon of traction for your
silly, inflatable readymades

thought-image collects in a puddle
(under the sign of)
        your sneakers which make me giggle

books hard to part with
(paint with?)
        haptic tautology

“when I think about you I quote myself”
        but nobody chooses a patriarchal tattoo

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A Little Rain

The hot spell broke last night
Today, light showers, not even enough
to damp down the sandy dust in the front yard

But just the sight of rain slanting earthwards
seen from under a café awning, lifts the spirits, germinates
resolutions: baking, planting, travelling

I bake pecan bread, cosset the rebel oven
the loaves look fine. Bougainvillea scales the front wall
making a saffron backdrop for birds, a shrill type – wattle?

We continue with Schuyler’s letters, having finished Padgett’s
Life of Joe Brainard. To Joe, Jimmy writes: ‘So in England
weight is still given in “stones” … So the English are much more

stoned than we … Some day Uncle Wiggily will tell you all about
rods and poods, though it may not be for a score of years.’
Smashing to get a letter from Wiggily – or any letter

one with a stamp, and someone’s witticisms, not gonna happen
a long-stay guest at Great Spruce Head Island, Schuyler
hung out for ‘the mailboat’ – more romantic still

a baroque concert this afternoon, very Jim, & home to French paperbacks
another of his loves, stacked in the kitchen, saved from Georgie’s toss-pile
Duras, Hugo, Georges Sand, from her French course, Newcastle, in the 80s

Les grands marées, the high tides; Un barrage contre le pacifique
two watery titles. On the Duras cover, a painting, tidal flats and grasses
grey low water. ‘L’année suivante, la petite partie des barrages

qui avait tenu s’était à son tour écroulée.’ Jim’s last year to the letter.
Odd one out in the stack is Herb Gardening, Clare Loewenfeld. ‘Sometimes
lemon balm shoots up very early in spring, if there is a warm spell’

There was! It did!

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Charge Nurse

depth-charge migraine
aftershock bouncing side to side in brain-pan
Pola knows this is no ordinary lie-down
I hear her clip up the passage
into the room
stop beside me
to lick my fingers
where they dangle
from under the covers

she trips softly away
returning every five minutes
to perform the same ceremony

I’m cheered, beneath the pain
and touched. How have I earned
this devotion?

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Dressed in Yella

My voice-reading facility kicks in
as I listen to the recording
with forensic precision it deciphers
her answering-machine message

one part frightened, two parts breathless
My sister sounds harried, almost asthmatic
and that’s her work voice
Oh dear. I’m too far away

and powerless in any case
still in the grip of
eldest-sister
God-complex

I put on my pink satin slippers
switch to Cinderella. Pola stops by
to lick my chin. She doesn’t
need saving

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