Ern Malley: I have gone missing from this world

                                                                                          for Toss

It's a late Twentieth Century sort of feeling
driving in my car,

dead in the daytime, up at night
lively as a 'wire'.

– My 'little joke'. –

But it is curious, you've got to admit –
Does a hippy sleep like this?

Does my wife? an airhead
in some respects. Finally, but,

smarter than me. I
am her problem.

Not her only one. But major –
and abiding.

She sleeps easy.
I sleep awake, a nut.

A gay, light-hearted bastard, ERN MALLEY cuts a moodily romantic figure within the dun Australian literary scene, his name inevitably conjuring perhaps that best known image of him, bow-tie askew, grinning cheerfully, at the wheel of his 1958 Jaguar sports car, El Cid. It is this image that also carries in its train the stories of later suffering-the affairs, the women, the bad teeth-and, speaking of teeth, the beautiful poems wrenched from the teeth of despair & written on the wrist of happiness “where happiness happens to like its poems written best” (in his inordinate phrase).

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, despite our initial glee at receiving ten new poems by Ern Malley himself, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this poem was in fact written by Ken Bolton and John Jenkins.

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Ern Malley: Prospect Of The Young KB As A Critic

                     “For a long time I stayed in bed very late.”
                         — Marcel Proust

I remember with a kind of spiritual / intellectual
‘wince’ the boredom of the papers on Sunday. The comics.
The last page, if you still hoped
for some relief (it was, after all, ‘the last page’), featured Val
(Prince Valiant), Radish, Laredo Crocket & maybe
The Potts … (& some puzzles, Chucklers, I never did).

Radish I remember with some affection. Though did
I feel it then? Rarely. In it a couple — or a threesome? — engaged in 
                   intellectual
problems thought to typify their late-middle-aged, maybe
almost ‘battler’ status. There was no action in these comics —
& in this instance, invariably, the old lady, her hair worn (like Val
‘s) in a bun (Val sported, when I think about it, a curious Cleopatra cut), 
                   dried a dish or waved an admonishing finger—& hoped

or worried that — say — money, which she hoped
would arrive, would arrive — & pay their bills. The bloke, though he did
hardly anything (& nothing that didn’t go wrong) — read the paper, bottled
                   beer — or carried his device, a manly hammer — tightened a val-
ve that needed loosening — & while he talked over his shoulder she wiped
                   up & talked back. (As fair to call this “intellectual”
as “abstract”, I think.) Maybe it would happen, maybe it wouldn’t, whatever
                    ‘it’ was & one rarely knew. In these comics
long-foreshadowed action — maybe

because it took so long & was uneventful — like tension ‘going away’ rather
                   than definitively ending — did not seem like action, & maybe
Radish held some microscopic fascination — how I think of it now — because,
                   in a pasture out the window he grazed, the ‘wild’ or trump card we 
                   hoped
might one day be played — in a rescue of narrativity, surreal but 
                   consequential. Radish, the last of the comics
on this last page, took its name from the badly drawn, sway-backed horse
                   suspended leit motif, incendiary loose-cannon narrative device —
                   available, should its creators feel (as I did)
the need for it. In fact weeks would go by in which we did not catch sight
                   of the beast — & then we did — leading his contemplative (not to say 
                   intellectual)
life, truly a Life of Riley, munching, chewing, raising his tail. Was he their
                   unconscious? their libido? The Potts’ id? “Val,”

Prince Valiant’s flaxen-haired betrothed would say, “Val,
stick it to me.” But she never did — though she admired him, as I never 
                   could, while he practised his archery, sharpened his sword, ‘had 
                   moods’. Was this maybe
muscular Christianity avant la lettre? or a puritan paganism? Val never 
                   promised the violently insurrectionary the way Radish did, or even
                   the intellectual
far-fetchedness & ‘possibility’ of the horse — who had a rumoured history as
                   a one-time winner: hopes hoped
of him had some basis. Val on the other hand, had done nothing — text-
                   book stuff, dutifully, text-book battles, text-book dispensing of 
                   justice, text-book falconry. There was no melodrama. Val did
everything in orderly fashion. He would never even grow bored with 
                   himself, bored enough to come bursting through the door, cigar in
                   his mouth, gun in improbable hoof, announcing He-haww! The 
                   Drinks are on me, as the horse would … or would in the comics

I desired. Was the strip named after the horse, as I imagined? Then who
                   were The Potts? Or Wally & the Major? Why, of the comics
on the other page, was the one I understood least the most intriguing — the
                   modern one, temporal miles from Val
but geographic miles from me (I assumed it was America, though almost too
                   literate — which made it, then, socio-economic miles from me, too)?
                   where what they did
was sit, & amble around, in an airy open-planned lounge or den — & maybe
read the comix, or Sunday papers or a magazine. The heroine hoped
she would not be bored, & father — handsome, quizzical, sporty dresser —
                   made dry remarks — as did mom — another intellectual?

The young girl (eighteen? twenty-two?) wore Prince Val’s hair-do, better 
                   than Val did,
& torreador pants & maybe lounged on her spine, oblique & petulant — & 
                   hoped
her boredom would end: like me she hated the comics … & Sundays … an
                   attractive young bourgeoise — while I remained, like Radish before me,
                   a ‘dark horse’ — yet, like the girl, soon to grow fiercely intellectual.

A gay, light-hearted bastard, ERN MALLEY cuts a moodily romantic figure within the dun Australian literary scene, his name inevitably conjuring perhaps that best known image of him, bow-tie askew, grinning cheerfully, at the wheel of his 1958 Jaguar sports car, El Cid. It is this image that also carries in its train the stories of later suffering-the affairs, the women, the bad teeth-and, speaking of teeth, the beautiful poems wrenched from the teeth of despair & written on the wrist of happiness “where happiness happens to like its poems written best” (in his inordinate phrase).

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion: “… despite our initial glee at receiving ten new poems by Ern Malley himself, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that three of these poems – namely Escape Clause, A Fool To Care and Prospect of KB as a Young Critic – were in fact written by Ken Bolton. .”

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Ern Malley: A Fool To Care

Hell – now what could be
more vernacular than that? –
he was an agent merely, mother, don't
you see? But I see myself you are
plotzed, or becoming so. Raffiné, sure,
distingué too, we'll allow, but well on the way
to shickered, my louche little maman
all unbonneted. No more for you.
For me there should be everything. I
loved him. That shirt, those boots, the tragedy –
as you remarked – of having so much the essence
of day time TV star nailed it
for me. Nailed it to me: me
& impossibility. Ha ha. For you to spy on
& laugh at through your glass. I
will not keep his number. You have spoiled that
for me. I don't think I will even have
another drink on this verandah.
I'm going to bed now – you should too –
to dream of him against the balustrade
the sere waves & wind & tufted sand dunes behind,
wind in his hair. Or not to dream. Why
bother? That corner where I lean sometimes
& have liked to look mornings at the incoming waves
tiny, scudding, pale & clear
or darkened in the evening, which say only, now,
“Fool to care”.

A gay, light-hearted bastard, ERN MALLEY cuts a moodily romantic figure within the dun Australian literary scene, his name inevitably conjuring perhaps that best known image of him, bow-tie askew, grinning cheerfully, at the wheel of his 1958 Jaguar sports car, El Cid. It is this image that also carries in its train the stories of later suffering-the affairs, the women, the bad teeth-and, speaking of teeth, the beautiful poems wrenched from the teeth of despair & written on the wrist of happiness “where happiness happens to like its poems written best” (in his inordinate phrase).

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion: “… despite our initial glee at receiving ten new poems by Ern Malley himself, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that three of these poems – namely Escape Clause, A Fool To Care and Prospect of KB as a Young Critic – were in fact written by Ken Bolton. .”

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Ern Malley: Escape Clause

I have presumed to mark the moment of conception:
I shall now commemorate
the hour of my final deliverance. Boing! Kenneth Koch's
giant soup ladle sweeps me into the sky.
“Gentlemen,”–tips hat, waves cane to faces below–
“I am delighted at the development
of the refluxomatic engine. The earth's burping,
if you will, affords opportunity & mechanism–
& a new dance craze–as well as the pattern
from which a novel midget racer
can be built, 'ready to assemble'!
This one I have painted a French blue
& drive like a Gordini–the Gordini of the mind
–or the Bugatti of the mind–
keeping all the while my eye on the actual road
& hand steady on the actual wheel, a dream
of toast provided by a good woman, part Aunt Bea
part Salomé, toast & marmalade, &
a view of the garden (for am I not Bonnard,
or Vuillard–at some level, really? Aren't you? Isn't
everybody–aren't we all, at some level, to a degree,
hungry? Here, have some!), on my right
the morning paper: & I read
bauxite has fallen!
Bauxite! Get up you big galoot–I'll tell you
                                               when you've fallen!
But that's my mind, cajoling. Ka-chink–ah,
change! (My mind again.) Reaches in till
takes out medium denomination, airs it, puts it
(airily) in pocket, breast pocket, a decorative edge poking up,
leans out once more, clears throat, the
thrusting chin of Lenin–“Gentlemen!” (Crowd
cheers) “Gentlemen!– (Mind you, …)” —
begins.

A gay, light-hearted bastard, ERN MALLEY cuts a moodily romantic figure within the dun Australian literary scene, his name inevitably conjuring perhaps that best known image of him, bow-tie askew, grinning cheerfully, at the wheel of his 1958 Jaguar sports car, El Cid. It is this image that also carries in its train the stories of later suffering-the affairs, the women, the bad teeth-and, speaking of teeth, the beautiful poems wrenched from the teeth of despair & written on the wrist of happiness “where happiness happens to like its poems written best” (in his inordinate phrase).

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion: “… despite our initial glee at receiving ten new poems by Ern Malley himself, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that three of these poems – namely Escape Clause, A Fool To Care and Prospect of KB as a Young Critic – were in fact written by Ken Bolton.”

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Warne Malley: the marketing of blonde tips

i love our shane i love his hair
his search for love and glory
i love his search for australias heart
but thats another story

        shane – samuel s kidman

 
 
 

grinning at my isolation i rub my hands in the dust
upon my trembling intuitive arm
showing my hat to the event
i wanna be a
ustraliana

im the ideal state the perfect human
like batsmen made liminal you priests only only think its
irony because you cant face that
there may not be nor ever has been
any mine is a
blanc masterful face
the figure that strode hell swinging
his head by the hair
on church st
down to the bay at night and on the water see reflected
golden lights
b & h and fosters im gonna be a
ustraliana im not gonna be a
n australian idiot welcome
to a new kind of tension
the ends of every hair on my head are blanc hot
i become the shadow which always follows
all batsmen and always precedes them
     day works at its own empire
but the true & actual gods of this earth require no
illumination

i assert my original glory in the dark eclipse
and in this pitch
the sparkle of something baseless and without depth
i emit light just as i carry shadow with me shadow

& everything under the sun is in tune
but _____
one moment of daylight lets me have the
difference between a salad and a diced cow
like a blanc arm thrust
my hat to the event          that
is where i sometimes keep my hair
out of shadows dark & sinister my deception comes
i vary my angles sometimes i am satire sometimes i am sun
with the crack of an outback whip i rise from the wrist
o kestrel there
is cunning certainly there is cunning
but all irony is eliminated there is cunning but there is
no irony & not everyone can be steve monaghetti

it is not the isolation and the occasion that lifts me
i take full responsibility for my action
s every action i have ever taken
whirled in their vortex it gets me wkts
i am pure product
there have never been any indiscretions
the dead tree gives no shelter the cricket no relief
can you hear the sound of hysteria blanc
swan flamingo

es give us our penguins or our pigeons
red nikes & gold ponies
nothing but partnerships
___ it is
not shot
but ill always be a hot shot
4s or 6s ive never been one for lonely singles
you can stick my pink appealing head on a
flamingos body give
us our pigeons      or our pigeons or
our parrots
fear makes them play a blanc shot

whos a pretty polly hot shot
hear the sound of hysteria
disappear in the throng

                   malaga 2005

WARNE MALLEY materialised on the plains surrounding Toldeo during the summer of 2005. Bowling handy legspin and speaking only a unique dialect of the Spanish language he moved quickly south. He currently captains the first grade side for a small club on the coast. He clearly has no sister.

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion: “We're also deeply ashamed to admit that we didn't pick Nick Whittock as the author of The Marketing of Blonde Tips, originally attributed to Warne Malley.”

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Veronica Malley: Bardot

That's why blondeness hurts —
In every movie I portray
Vulnerability to
Humanity. You've got it,
That's why being
A 'goddess' hurts: the people
Never measure up.
I approach the foam.
I mother in mock
Profile. Dangling,
Reminiscing my in-
Volvements … It
Doesn't hurt any more
Than being in love (the sea).

VERONICA MALLEY is a retired schoolteacher. She lives with her companion in an inner suburb of Melbourne. Of the Romantics she prefers Byron; she is writing a long work entitled 'Peas and cantos'.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we're moved and astonished to admit that we didn't pick Michael Farrell as the author of this so-called poem.”

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Veronica Malley: Build a House

Build a house, a subject close
To dreams … where snow falls
Outside and dingoes pad, making
Shadows. Up the stairs to light —
The night will pass like black
Oxygen. Down the stairs to fear
Is a way to absorb experience.
A house has to learn. You come
Later … and in dreams and storms return.

VERONICA MALLEY is a retired schoolteacher. She lives with her companion in an inner suburb of Melbourne. Of the Romantics she prefers Byron; she is writing a long work entitled 'Peas and cantos'.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we're moved and astonished to admit that we didn't pick Michael Farrell as the author of this so-called poem.

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Veronica Malley: Cruise

Fated to have a poem
For a face. Like a horse
Stumbling through blue light
Discos with a fake
Erection for the press.
It's a pinnacle of sorts,
Dudes. (Reeves ventriloquised
Me). If this is the ocean —
Pass the salt. I'm on fire
Etc.: no sleep till Spring-
Steen. Every few days I come
Here at the mountains; to be
With the giants, think about
The small things that make me big.

VERONICA MALLEY is a retired schoolteacher. She lives with her companion in an inner suburb of Melbourne. Of the Romantics she prefers Byron; she is writing a long work entitled 'Peas and cantos'.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we're moved and astonished to admit that we didn't pick Michael Farrell as the author of this so-called poem.

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Sylvia Malley: bestseller

black lung of small regret
narcoleptic flickers in
fluorocity's 711 chivalry
a latex glove thrusts
its gladiolic prophecy
into the heart of the jumbo
jetcat, daytrippers mistaking
the harbour for a nation

the collective semiconscious
slurps in its uniform of quicksand
like a tour squad gelato sunday
in negotiation with soap bomb
analysts, did you forget the
immortality of dirt; the thawed
prawn, pericles, busks near
a bin

Sylvia Malley is a cousin of the late Australian poet Ern Malley. She is the daughter of Ern's cousin, Morris Malley. The Ern Malley literary scandal caused the Malley family to fear poetry for many decades. However, Sylvia, a Malley inheritrix, could not avoid the family's innovative poetic genes, and one lunchtime while browsing through the Australian Poetry shelf in Dymock's Bookstore, George Street Sydney, she discovered Ern's poetic oeuvre in the Penguin Book of Modern Australian Poetry [ed.Tranter/Mead]. Since then she has become an avid reader of contemporary Australian Poetry and a closet poet herself. Through her internet browsings she discovered that the on-line poetry journal 'cordite' was seeking submissions for a 'Children of Ern Malley' issue, so she decided to take a chance with one of her recent poems. Sylvia works as an optometrist in the business district of Sydney. In recent years she has become a keen harbour ferry spotter. She lives in Manly.

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we're moved and astonished to admit that we didn't pick joanne burns as the author of this so-called poem.

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Simper Malley: Being Out with New Couples Reminds Me of Monotremes

Being out with new couples
reminds me of monotremes

They oftentimes speak of falling
in and making kissyface love

They gab a fragrant
arrow of shit, too

with the same cupid mouths

SIMPER MALLEY’s rapier and acerbic social observations are oftentimes mistaken for Bill Bryson-esque whinging. This is not the case. Bolstered by surviving the crushing poverty and abandonment of his youth, Simper exploded onto the global literary atlas in the early sixties with unmatched bravado. His Making Hamburger from Freshwater Trout while Fishing America for Pert, Young Chicks, published 1966, affords him to rest forever on his laurels in the public view; a perch he was never comfortable with as he felt his later work was far superior to his earlier successes. Simper Malley bought the farm, in every sense, in 1983. This is his most recent, posthumous publication. Montana misses him greatly.

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this poem was in fact written by Kent MacCarter.

							
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Resole Malley: The New Italics

We brought out the new italics
because we wanted to re-
emphasize things formerly iterated.
We had nothing new.
Those of us working on this
end of things understood
we could only do this once.
Once you bring out the new italics
you can't put them back
in the box. We smiled as if we
had anticipated this day,
when you would look up to us with
wonder in your eyes, afraid
of the things you had heard so many times
before. This is why the new italics.

Resole Malley, a Trappist Monk, was raised by wolves. He has Canadian blood, which, unlike Canadian Bacon, doesn't stay fresh if left out. He has rambled around some, mostly from the bed to the bathroom, and once saw Prince in the Los Angeles airport. He also dated Vanity's sister, but has no claims to ethnic insider information. He published a novel once that some people liked. He also claims to have written “Islands in the Stream.” His wife tells him which shirt goes with which pants.

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY |

Resole Malley: Love Me, Love my Protruberance

I wear the chains
I forged in life.
You see me here,
with the straw
and the leash.
I have the gall
to fall in love with
you. Tentatively,
you reach out a
hand and touch me
there. I smile
like a spado.
You rethink the
meanings of love.
Nobody's perfect.
Come a little closer.
Your breath is
hot, unclean,
and so human.
I chance it.
It's been a long time.
You roll around
in seeming delight.
We are what we seem.

Resole Malley, a Trappist Monk, was raised by wolves. He has Canadian blood, which, unlike Canadian Bacon, doesn't stay fresh if left out. He has rambled around some, mostly from the bed to the bathroom, and once saw Prince in the Los Angeles airport. He also dated Vanity's sister, but has no claims to ethnic insider information. He published a novel once that some people liked. He also claims to have written “Islands in the Stream.” His wife tells him which shirt goes with which pants.

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY |

Raven Malley’s Statement

It's all incomplete. The seasons win that battle, but these poems, published for the first time here, are the wild surprise of women, of Malley girls. The Malley man was true as he was taken, still is. He is our furious empty protagonist. And Ethel is our compleat Croydon lyricist!

Don't believe what you're told. The woman forced to take the fall is not the woman who wrote these words below. I have returned her to him and to you.

Ethel lived and fought for the words taken from her by shysters and flim-flammers when uncle Ern died and her servitude was shattered. No longer need Ethel hide behind the suburban myth. So much depends on kitchen tables and desperate midnights, when children look over the shoulders of the moon. I can see her still, my mother the loyal sister crying over the paper and secretly pulling words through the screen door of life, remembering how Ern lay sick and weary in the back room beyond. So often she would cry out: O Vegemite! O crapola!

The Malley poems resolved to give us a new literature and these brief psalms of where and how that rising future would happen are more than formal spasms or gustatory flushes. They live on, making no distinction between akam and puram but instead stride forward into their own transmigratory pact with the new, giving rhythm to their action. They are multitudes.

My mother is now flown. I still sing, not worrying about interpretative gaps. The half-eaten pizza of theory is now less cogent than its sodden crust. I present myself as ongoing research, a new bird of transgression, getting the bite back on reality, not as an echo, or a sign but unknown to unknown, the surprise of existence.

These are our wilder Hebrides. Now is the hour of the novachord!

Raven Malley is the daughter of Ethel Malley. She lived for most of the 1970s in a commune on the North Coast, Woomynlaynd, but after finally learning how to spell she moved back to Croydon and has devoted herself to re-inventing the lost works of her mother, who she believes was wrongly characterised as a suburban philistine due to a forged letter. Raven is writing a potentially explosive expose of the true Malley behind the ectoplasm, which asks “who really wrote Ern's poems?”.

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this statement was in fact written by Jill Jones.

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Raven Malley: When He Was Maximised

(a lost etheric poem by Ethel Malley, reconstructed by Raven Malley)

1.
You were frequently covered by heavy sky.
This sight of you at your superficial lowest
I've limited to dreams, intruder
at the entry of order.
Then ignorance relaunched its vista of another day
………………….
adapted to further muddy waters.

Kestrel concepts are without faith
bread and fish, miracles, shutdowns.
You, expert of pentagrammed desires
the magical resistance to lazy newspapers
of the white man, greyed the centre
as destiny swans the calm, smoothly.

Silken eyes excluded me, the girl
as interlocutors thrummelled basalt coasts
at the order of a love of mine
………………………
Although these prognoses are executed
in no place, writing is the incomplete
its ends interrogate the temporary ones.

2.
The symbols were obvious, despite doors.
In the park, I skipped to disapproval of birds
nipples of iron oxidising under the kiss
loaned for the weekend
while new people leaked, disjointed and broken
gripping with knotted hands
cloud and bugle in oblique Footscray.
Outside the torn quartz of the plaza
elephants contorted walls
and vapid monstrances were raised in protection.

In the hour of the fist and ribaldry
these Chinese horizontal lines ran tangent
to the rainbow.
We visualized a flash of folding sideshows
to the east of these diversions.

One hour was more intelligent than most
its pulse like a raised registry.
Then it was good bye to forms
the dumb version drowned in a green lagoon
while cancellations caught in night's red tape
the rig of an echo generation.

Promise of new configurations became pride
estimated dreams replacing
…………………….
and houses of slaughter.
Declarations and agreements
about the squalor of order
flanked the water with blue angels
their dark hats fitted with false grams.

I remember the clear dark, its luminous thorn.
Density as desire, it burned bright, briefly.

3.
Solidity for the prudent!
We were wraiths carrying scandals of data
in excess, you and I, squeezing the buttock
of newspapers and sucking florentines
siding with the etceteras, cultivating deflections
into a lake of colours that breath of rosy losses
whose tracks gather at the moved mountain
along toxic modulations
………………..
fish moving to the will of crossed objectives
limitless remorse like a gold mine.

A universe of birth marks blooms
in the face of old aches.
Nature's green centuries assemble in chains
off centre from time's convex.
They will taunt for the duration.
We can only be ordered as we are
spectators shanked to ibises along a dead Nile.

Vacancy, then you offered the guide
announced as a sale of mechanics
during hours of obligation.
O Denunciations! The hidden screw
continuous its moves. As such it is pitiless
even for one who vacillates within the dance.

Words are praise of morning's magpie
above facile flocks and wingtips.
There's a red wound at the edge
a slip in the outfield, jittery as history.
The imperial fog of the new poets
…………………….
and furies, their eyes bandaged by procedures
against incredible slatterns.

There's a state of hardness whose tastes
move more bitter than you, my brother.
We appreciated the double, its deceptive number
on the gothic distance, crenellated
for beauty and then the sky.
Old protests are the first place
we learnt to speak the obvious.

5.
The structure of your voice had no place
in that age of notionless men.
Codified ectoplasm snuck onto gibberish walls
between an oasis and the next mirage.
The single clerk of metamorphosis
started up the cobbled hill to the castle
all those collated images preserving
the languish in centres of Europe
and the right to be sad till his own burial.

Forgets sins which run between our hands.
The gum's tears are also true
while the wily spider
turns aphorisms on any newcomer.
Despite the thrill of the cock that is nightmare
I continue your rhythm, images and measures.

Brother, I have often stumbled into erasure
the trash of existence piles into inevitable
graphic conclusions
……………………
My evasions burst their basins.
I lived a grey shade suburb
moulded on rust, on clutter without act.
I duplicated the infinite.
Beyond, bird flown.

RAVEN MALLEY is the daughter of Ethel Malley. She lived for most of the 1970s in a commune on the North Coast, Woomynlaynd, but after finally learning how to spell she moved back to Croydon and has devoted herself to re-inventing the lost works of her mother, who she believes was wrongly characterised as a suburban philistine due to a forged letter. Raven is writing a potentially explosive expose of the true Malley behind the ectoplasm, which asks “who really wrote Ern's poems?”

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this poem was in fact written by Jill Jones.

Posted in 24: CHILDREN OF MALLEY | Tagged

Ouyang Malley: The Kingsbury Tales: the shirt

Lying in a corner of my room, the shirt
Is a gray color
I shed it as soon as I put it on this morning for the Court
As my back, the back of my neck, and, in fact, my whole upper trunk
Started getting itchy
It's a strange shirt in that sense for it never fails to make me itch
Far as I remember it this is a gift shirt from Ming my brother in October 1999
Back then, he was alive (what a redundant thing to say)
Now, he is dead
Today, finally unable to take the itchy load, I stripped myself bare
Of the gift, the memory, along with the guilt
That by so doing I might have committed an act of betrayal
I said to my wife:
I'm going to dump this itchy shirt
I'm not even going to give it away to the Australian poor
For philanthropy
China-made, it should be Chinese-trashed
Good idea, she said
After putting on a different shirt, I remembered
Once again for the hundredth time
That Ming was tortured to death in a Chinese prison
On 20 August 2003
Because of his Falungong belief

OUYANG MALLEY is an unknown Australian poet whose first published poem is ‘The Kingsbury Tales: the shirt'.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion: “While it may seem obvious in hindsight, Ouyang Malley (whose poem The Kingsbury Tales: The Shirt is featured in the issue) is actually Ouyang Yu.”

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O’Hara Malley: Upper Level Arithmetic – or ‘If James Schuyler Got a Rise from the Ladies’

Her name ought be Genevieve or
Henrietta, those are
my guesses
if she sells herself by
the hour and …wait, she dresses
like that bent of lady, maybe
a fiver per kilo per. She
presses the elevator
button twelve, and me
fourteen, that boils
down to six-sevenths
which is the fraction
that's leg
yet allows me
now, at my age, a fissure
to forget long
division, though this refresher
course between her
feet going up is welcome

Hailing from Lilli Pilli, NSW, O'HARA MALLEY has enjoyed a storied career as dune buggy mechanic and part-time, literary urbanite. A double degree in heavy machinery maintenance and 20th Century Pop Culture (specialising in Judy Garland and her roles in feminist inebriation) has afforded O'Hara the unique opportunity to harness the affect of the crash-course, both in human life and vehicle operation., which he then projects onto characterisation. This is considered his specialty. His works have appeared in Stolling Rone, Stealing Roans, and Horse & Buggy Thievery Today.

REVEALED!
As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this poem was in fact written by Kent MacCarter.

							
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Maralyn Spears-Malley: everybody’s someone

everybody's someone
each time I look outside
the world spreads its legs
and all the little parts
from the bottom of my broken
heart you take but cannot be given
you gotta let me cake
on some more make up to cover up
all those lies. the horrible people
it's as anatomic
something beautiful something free
yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah. you see
my problem is i hate the rock star
yeah (dirty dirty dirty) dollar bills
i played with the scabs of you
(you're such a dirty dirty) baby
one more time you fearpeel off all those eyes
and i'll be forever.

Maralyn Spears-Malley resides in Hades, USA (also known as Florida) where she devotes her time to writing poetry and biting the heads off back up singers. Keep an eye out for her debut poetry collection, ‘Antichrist Mouseketeer', soon to be released through Vanitee Press.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we are humbled and disappointed to announce that this poem was in fact written by Gabrielle Everall and Amerlia Walker.

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Lee N. Mylar: The dynamic ribbon device

Forget the question Who is this?. Ask instead
What do I have in my hands? and compare
your receiver with my gun. Then listen,
my friend, to the sound of the butt of it

kissing your son's skull. Keep in mind
those roadside signs of ours: men
you've worked with. Their open necks spill

crimson scarves: the smile we finally show
they can't resist. No, you can't talk to him.
Soon, you'll hear a dial-tone, then
the whisper of the front wheel of his bike

spinning in the grass half-way down your street.
He almost made it home. You were too busy
with your union meetings to be useful. But

companies don't hold grudges like people do.
Tomorrow, the gates of the factory
will still be open for those of you who
know how to work hard and quietly.

Lee N Mylar does not write poetry, fiction or libretti. Lee exceeds the constraints of the apolitical industry of literature, ironically, by submitting veiled revolutionary manifestos in the form of (cue hand-gestured quote marks) poems to the literary journals that get mentioned in The Age, then uses the rejection letters as rollie papers. Lee hates anagrams, and harms Satan age.

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