Flannery O’Malley: Bitter William

The first born's a nong and yet they give him
the hat and stick and jacket. Now golf's easier
than tennis, than anything I've tried, than all the ars

combined, and easier than memory — what colour
were your eyes, your hair — I speculate on your underwear.
You're vanishing, or the thought of you is less indelible,

the image of your form in the lab now a sunlit
shimmer — soon only a name, a half-remembered
gesture, my hand on your vulva between classes.

Still my brother's the better man — more domestic
than feral, suburban not dilettante — a glamourless,
blameless middle. Saturdays he carts the attack

all over the park; he shines as though all the shims
and wedges of the mighty were exerted at his whim;
how he wields the earth! And I'm laconic in the stands,

expectant as an aged passenger, static and seething,
where once I was unencumbered as a eucalypt. So we live
up here tethered at the whip-end of a steaming coil

of asphalt looped around the mountain — bachelor
captives on a hillside dairy where the buried forebears
set up a ceaseless chatter. Were I to go far from this place,

I'd miss the cows' gentle lowing, the town shopping strip
there below, the amateur theatrical society, Sunday mass,
the idiolect. In the manipulative sky, the implacable faces

of the angels decry my several murders, uncomposed, alone.

Flannery O'Malley was born in 1971 in a slab hut near Sassafras in the Turpentine Range. He attended the local school at Nerriga, but left at 15 after getting a job with a ride operator at the Braidwood Show. He then toured the state working at all the big shows — Bathurst, Dubbo, Cobar. He was killed tragically last year when a hydraulic ram failed on the Crazy Mouse Spinning Coaster at the Mudgee Show. This poem was found in his papers.

REVEALED!

As reported on Cordite News Explosion, we're moved and astonished to admit that we didn't pick Cordite's founding editor Adrian Wiggins as the author of this poem.

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Eve N. Malley: Tossed grubs

steaming zucchini !
combine the grubs
with the other grub
for tossed grub salad.
the evening's tasks
pressurise the lyric,
noir-ish nostalgia
that no wordplay
can compensate.
full colour con tricks,
content not so,
like being
whacked at Wacol
by a Little Golden Book.
Donald Duck
and Goofy      now
childhood anachronisms,
(I plumb
psychic depths)
entropy is us,
Nancy has osteoporosis,
Boofhead's incontinent,
only Richie Rich
appears ok –
he runs
a superannuation scheme
with Casper
the friendly ghost
who travels frequently

EVE N. MALLEY is a prominent Melbourne-born bon vivant and poet who once earned her living as John and Sunday Weed's kitchen hand. She has published monographs on cooking, sex, gardening, comic books and art. She is currently writing a study of love poetry of the 1950s. Eve N. Malley lives, these days, in the Cotswolds.

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

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Ern Malley Jr.: My sister’s eyes are nothing like the sun…

The uptake on familial grounds is never
shaky as it seems, that geno-argument,
future-speak, anachro-indifference
to detail. Core biology essentialises
crankshaft and pistons,
busy cylinders, those bright sparks
greasy in the pit. And I have been there
languorous and cow-eyed, a dove
where hawks might fall, thermostat
stuck shut so the flow drops to zero.
I know the fountains of Rome,
water closets and the pont neuf ??
such is my body, vine-like, genealogical,
melancholic in the British Library: guest-host.

Ern is of the park, and occasionally further afield. He channels, divines, and is pretty much an open book. He is losing his ambitions.

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