David Prater Interviews Coral Hull

DP: On the day before I was going to interview you in Darwin, the front page of the NT News screamed: “DRUNKS TAKE OVER GRAVES”. At the time it seemed an omen of sorts, given that the theme for our current issue is Zombie – the implication being that these “drunks” or “itinerants” (or whatever new euphemism the NT News has come up with) in fact constitute the living dead. What's your take on this, given that you're now a self described “Territorian”? Do you think Top Enders have a more casual attitude towards death?

CH: I almost read that as 'DRUNKS TAKE OVER GAYS' and thought, sounds like a typical Saturday night at the Larrakeyah Barracks. I think that Territorians have a casual attitude to just about everything. Beer is considered a form of currency, but only if you get the colour of the can right. Since they come in blue, red and green that might prove complex for some. The NT is the place where cliches come true. Question is; what came first the cliche or the Territorian …

… it is wise be viligant when it comes to services up here, particularly medical services. People tend to be casual about death particularly when it's not their own. The saying goes, 'if you get a pain catch the plane!' It must be the hypnotic affect of the humidity, the heat, the light and the land. The presence of nature remains strong. There are still shells on the beach and geckos live inside the house. The mangroves will still swallow the pylons and the salt water crocodiles will still swallow us if we let them. While both have been brutalised neither have been tamed.

The Top End is a tropical desert paradise and remains wild. As my visiting mother said, 'it's very unlike Queensland!' What I love about the energy of Darwin is that is highly unpredictable. You never know what will happen next. You can still pick a typical Territorian. They have a dry sense of humour and little seems to phase them. They are the ones who love to squeeze an extra dollar out of you and yet who will give you a freebie if you can't afford to be ripped off.

Amongst other things, mail always seems to be lost between all parts of the world and the Darwin GPO and it doesn't take someone with room temperature IQ to work out, that it might be the fault of the Darwin GPO and not all parts of the world! Sydney or Melbourne are too far away to be of concern. When we do think of them, we think of freight. Freight is the excuse for every con job that occurs north of Marla. 'Nothing I can do about it, it's the freight!' Freight is the NT equivalent of the feral cat, overrunning our imaginations more than anything else.

David, you mentioned that you have lived in the NT and I see that Cordite is a good promoter of NT poetry? What does the NT that mean to you in relation to who you are and your own work?

DP: Coral, yes, I lived in the NT for about 4 months in 1994 then about two months in 1996. I guess that was when I first really witnessed widespread racism against Aboriginal people – like, in the main street of Darwin! Cops in khaki, I thought I was suffering from culture shock. In a way, I was. Culture sickness, maybe. I had been a student at Sydney University, had read and thought a lot about indigenous issues but hadn't really confronted the reality of the divide between black and white Australia (also, this was during the Keating era, when reconciliation was the buzzword in Canberra – didn't seem to be high on anyone's priorities in the Top End).

The day I walked into the wrong part of a segregated bar in Katherine would have to be the moment where I felt most ashamed about being 'Australian'. It's a hard thing to describe – a lot of people I've told don't believe that this place exists. Ironically, I guess, Darwin itself is not really Australia – you described it as a 'tropical desert', I think that's very apt. It is closer to Timor than it is to Townsville, so I guess there's that stimulus. I find my senses overloaded every time I visit – there is something about the climate and the landscape that makes me want to stay and write magic realist novels for a while!

In terms of my own work, Darwin was where I first gave up on poetry and decided to write prose. I wrote a lot of stories when I was there. I was very conscious at the time that my writing had to exist in the real world – which for some reason precluded poetry. Maybe it was a back to basics, rock and roll thing – however, Darwin was also the place where I first came into contact with members of the Timorese community in Australia, and heard stories about Xanana Gusmao and Fretilin. This led me to write, months later, a poem about Xanana that has since become something of a totem for me in my writing. So I guess what I'm trying to say is that the NT, and Darwin in particular, represent a certain kind of political attitude or stance. Being there radicalized me. Here's a slightly unusual question: If you could bring back one Australian poet from the dead, who would it be? Why?

CH: This question evoked a similar feeling to when I saw my old dog Toby, who I had put down (or had killed) in Melbourne the night before, standing in the sunlit doorway of the terrace house backyard the next morning. For seconds this incredible sense of 'it's a miracle' came over me. Then he was gone again. It was extraordinarily painful. Yet for that moment it was like all my ideas of pain and suffering were void, that everything might just be beautiful and stay that way.

The poet does not have to survive. While all sense of preservation is ultimately an illusion, for as long as the poet's words survive, they will impact upon the world in some way. It's all about thought and action from thought. The spirit moves through the story that is passed on. The poet does not need to be present. Live for now. Eternity is more about peace than ego preservation.

As for bringing life back from the dead, it's the kind of power I thank god I don't have. I don't like the fact that sentient beings suffer, especially when so many needlessly suffer. But while I believe in euthanasia, I also resent the fact that I have felt compelled to place myself in the position of god, in order to make decisions over life and death. I would prefer not to be involved.

The first thing you need to do for another Australian poet, living or dead and particularly one whom for one reason of another you think you dislike, is to buy their latest book and read it or at least buy them a drink at the next literary festival. Whether you like something or not, it will still teach you something about yourself. Australian poetry needs to be more like entertainer Ricky Martin. It needs to be both sexy and spiritual. It needs to bring us back from the dead.

DP:You have written and campaigned extensively on the issue of animal rights – how easy (or hard) is it to translate the horror of slaughterhouses and battery hen farms (to name but two examples) into poetry? Do you think it's the most effective medium? Can you give an example of a poem of yours that sums up your feelings on this issue the best?

CH: Thank you for asking. There is no poem that can adequately describe the torture that some human beings inflict upon other sentient beings. Did I set myself an impossible task? Law professor and animal rights advocate Gary Francione said, 'how can you hope to teach the world about being kind towards crocodiles, when they still haven't learn to be kind to each other?' This comment reminds me of my earliest childhood feelings of being placed on the wrong planet.

Yet it all comes back to positive thinking or faith. We need to aspire to those who inspire us and they do exist. We need to look for the smaller lights that shine in people and nurture them. Humanity is compassionate and we must never lose sight of that – how beautiful people are. If I ever lose faith in humanity, I may as well give up here and now, as I will be no good to anyone less likely myself, since I am only human and we are all animals. We are all each other.

As for my poetry, my words fail the animals just as I ultimately failed them. All my life I have felt the presence of light/love or god or whatever you want to call it, even in the darkest places on earth. But there was no god in slaughterhouses and intensive animal farms. At the time I was barely coping and neither were many of those I worked with. I saw people suffer and burn out and the worst thing was that some very good people lost hope in humanity ever finding the way to compassion and in this way, they then became less than who they could have been.

As for the animals their agony goes beyond all knowledge and description. There is nothing like the complete absence of god. They were condemned to hell but never did any of those animals once give up on a better way of being in the world. The battery hens that were rescued and brought to backyards in Collingwood and St Kilda took to the grass and sunlight and as if it was long awaited for and the ones we had to leave behind never stopped trying escape their situation. Thousands of pigs and cows have to be beaten, dragged and knocked unconscious daily and in the early hours of the morning in order to be tortured and murdered by human beings.

There were many 'worst' things; animals with most of their bones broken stacked on top of each other and still alive. While the goat at Sitebarn slaughterhouse in Bourke screamed like a man these hens cried like babies. No one would know this unless they were out on the farms in that darkness. It is deliberately hidden by the psychopaths who are allowed to operate invest in these places. Each time we eat the flesh of the dead we support these atrocities. We must never forget that each slab of meat once had a personality. Just like you or I, each had a mother and a father and others they preferred to be around and food they preferred to eat. To support such a place is a crime against god. It deprives the world of our humanity and makes us less than we could be.

I will never forget the night that we were on this one particular farm just outside Melbourne. We could only really hope to carry two hens per sack away with us. They can be heavy when they are first jammed into the cages and we had a long way to go back out into the fields, so it was best to give whoever we could grab, the best opportunity at freedom. On this occasion we saw a roaming patrol car pull over our driver on the highway in the distance, the farmer's dog was barking and the shed lights were about switch on for feeding and we had to get out of there.

It was then that I heard this tiny cough coming from the centre of the shed. There was a bit of cackling from the thousands of hens squashed into the cages in this immense darkness. Then all was quiet again and this cough continued. It was so forlorn. I lost all sense of anything aside from that sound and knew that I had to get to that bird. I began to walk amongst the thousands and the cough stopped. I remember praying; 'please cough again-please please-' But nothing. Then as we slid the huge door open and stepped out into the night, it started to cough again and I knew the futility of all life on this planet and how it could be so incredibly abandoned to pain.

I would actually be interested to hear what you thought your most powerful poems are, that is poems that have affected you so deeply that you can return to them for comfort, or if not your own work, then that of other Australian poets. Are there any who have disturbed you?

DP: Thanks for this question, Coral. As I started saying above, if I had to choose a poem of my own that I consider powerful (I used the word totemic before), it would have to be 'Xanana's Dog', which was originally published in Cordite in 1998 I think (i.e. long before I became the editor). I don't know if you know the story but when I was in Darwin, someone told me a story about how the Indonesian army/police were searching for Xanana Gusmao (so this must be in the early 1990s, before he was captured) in a church. They told everyone to come out of the church because they had heard a rumour that Xanana was inside. Everyone came out – but no Xanana. Then this little dog walked out of the church.

What do you think happened? Well, the Indonesians arrested the dog, because they believed Xanana had supernatural powers, and could change forms. Whether this story is true or not does not really concern me – it speaks to so many other stories – Pemulway and the bullets going straight through him, Geronimo being at the head of every charge made against the white invaders. It also fascinated me because, well, who knows, maybe that dog is still locked up somewhere? In the poem, I took on the persona of the dog. The dog is asking Xanana to come and save him: 'Please help me, I am only a little dog!'

I know sometimes it seems odd when poets describe a favourite poem written by themselves, but this one I keep coming back to, and I have to say it has had an effect every time I've read it to an audience, especially if I shout. There is pity, compassion and anger in the poem – I guess I was trying to channel a sense of humanity through this dog, a sense of humanity I had never really felt to such an extent before in my writing. I still think it's because of the allegorical and slightly comical (though tragic) figure of the dog, whom others believe to be imbued with supernatural powers, but who turns out to be treated by the Indonesians in just the same as any other Timorese person. Also I think that for a lot of Australians, they are only just beginning to realize what has been happening to the Timorese people since 1975 9and 1999), the violence and tragedy of which is sometimes just too hard to describe.

Poets whose work I reach for at times when I need comfort, or at least a bit of affirmation, would have to be Francis Webb and Bruce Beaver. For me they are two of the unsung heroes of the history of institutionalization in Australia. I read 'Five Days Old' and it makes me cry. I read Beaver's 'Letters to Live Poets' and just feel alive again. There is the tragic and the comic in Beaver's writing, I can relate to that. I read Lionel Fogarty and feel the fury of his words – and the devastating simplicity (or at least, surface simplicity) of Oodgeroo's poems. Dorothy Hewett too, just because she was so imaginative, and wrote (I'm thinking here of 'Alice in Wormland' or 'Rapunzel in Suburbia') so vividly about a particularly Australian place or space.

When I read her work, I can't help putting myself in the back yard of a small town (I was born in Dubbo but don't remember it – I then lived in various small towns in NSW), aged probably six or seven, inventing games around the Hills Hoist because there was nothing else to do. Like, I remember trying to make a power station out of two cricket stumps and a piece of rope. Conceptually, I think, I may have been ahead of my time 😉 – but Hewett's work for me takes me back to that place. She imbued childhood with such malevolence, I think like no one else.

In your book “How Do Detectives Make Love?”, you write about violence and death, as well as the threat of violence – I'm thinking here of poems like “Pornography II”, “The Hanged Man”, “The Poets and the Pig”, “An Hour After Suicide” and “Fenton Dies” – looking back on that book now, if I can ask, how does it feel to re-read, or re-experience? Is it enough to exorcise violent demons through writing or is the process continuous?

CH: We can choose to be whoever we want to be at any given time, because we are all things. Every thought and action is a choice that we make and since choice involves awareness, awareness becomes our primary challenge. Self-awareness is the first step to transformation. I was in great pain and struggle when I wrote 'detectives.' My writing was primarily about overcoming, but I wanted more than to hang on by a thread along the bare bones of survival. I wanted to flourish and be of the light. Therefore my first books are largely about the inexhaustible will to life.

My greatest fear has been that the darkness I was born into, would finally overwhelm me or that I would become the monster I fought so hard to defeat. It was about the fear of annihilation. Even as a child I was able to turn the inaction of fear into the action of creation. The unrelenting and intense quality of some of my earlier the books such as 'detectives' emerged from that will. Attempt to disguise it as we might, our writing is only as we are. If we don't develop then neither will our writing. Those poems in 'detectives' were written a lifetime ago. I only vaguely remember the woman who wrote them. I rarely read my old work and usually I don't even like it.

My favourite time is about three quarters of the way through the book as it appears to takes on its own life races towards the end. It's like the horse being let off its tether and I am either a passive witness to that event or we fly together. When the book is complete I release it. This is the death of the book. Yet since there are multiple projects and the next book is underway the process in continuous. I only like about ten percent of my work. After I had my first three books accepted by Penguin I was more interested in the next book than the hype that often goes with publication.

I always wondered how one could bask in the glory of their own success. In my twenties I believed that if it ever happened to me, that I'd be unable to write the next book. I have never really allowed myself the pleasure of achievement and remain largely disassociated from it to this day. My primary feelings are associated with what is before me, that is the subject matter and then with act of creation, but mainly when I lose all sense of myself during the process. I believe in the story and in the telling of the story. I prefer not to think about how great I am.

David, what did you honestly think of 'detectives'?

DP: I expected 'How Do Detectives Make Love' to be far more graphic than it actually is. I was quite surprised by the lyrical nature of the poems – they caught me off guard. The use of the dashes ( / ) as well – I don't know, usually I hate that kind of thing, it reminds me of poets who centre every freaking poem they write, just because they can, but in your case I think that stylistic technique actually made the poems more evocative, like little collections of clipped lines, thoughts.

I think there's a deadly kind of humour to the poems too, something that's perhaps not really recognized (am I wrong? Do you think people perceive you as a dark, brooding poet?). I got a strong sense too of a complex range of emotions at work in the poems – though that might sound a trite but you seem to work yourself into a kind of flow, and for me, the best poems are the ones where that flow is uninterrupted. That being said, I think the sense of interruption (evoked partly by the dashes) while a little unsettling for me as a reader, created a kind of dynamic in the book as a whole.

The title poem in the collection for me is the strongest, because it asks such impossible questions and manages to answer them, in a way that gaives me an insight into your life. Another poem in that book, “Death of an Activist” struck me (as an outsider) as a kind of autobiography – am I wrong? What is that poem about? Perhaps you could talk about the ways in which you play with notions of identity in your work?

CH: I am often exploring notions of identity. While my work has been called confessional and autobiographical, I actually approach my writing in a similar way to an actor or a director approaching a film script. I remember during a creative writing class at Wollongong University many years ago, where I had written a poem about cutting my dead lover up and pushing his fat through a plug hole in a yellow bathroom basin in order to dispose of the body. At the time I was more frustrated by the colour yellow, than the fact that his bones kept getting caught in the drain. One of the students asked if that had actually happened. She was from North Sydney and she was serious. I said, 'yes.' Oddly enough, no one rang the police and I remain at large to this day.

DP: Tell me about your recent collaboration “Voices From The Dark” with Sandy Jeffs? Does it differ (if at all) from your collaboration with Kinsella in “Zoo” – in terms of the creative process, I mean?

CH: John and I went to the Taronga Park zoo together, yet the experience of writing the book was an impersonal one. It was primarily about the ordering of the content which underwent several drafts and not putting our names/our egos to the individual poems. We wanted the art without the artist. We were attempting the impossible in the art world and that is to become non-egocentric. A majority of reviewers picked up on this and went with it. There was only one from the USA who predictably focused on 'who was the better poet.' I can normally learn a lot from a critical review as well, but only if the reviewer is smarter than me. Too often reading a poor review of one's own work is like leading a horse to water and then watching it stand and drink its own piss.

Sandy and I are gradually writing prose about 'the way we are in the world.' Sandy relates to the perceptions of mathematical genius John Nash in 'A Beautiful Mind,' whereas I relate to the solider Private Witt, from Kentucky in 'The Thin Red Line.' The writing process has involved a series of stops and starts. It's like doing a degree part time. What happens in between the theory is what is important. Reading Sandy's words has given me the courage to talk about many things for the first time. My focus has also changed as my awareness has grown regarding my situation.

It has been a lifelong challenge with around 20 different mental health workers in order to try and get a grasp on the most basic things, why did he or she do that? What does it mean? How might I interpret that signal? What is the appropriate response? What might be the result of the interaction? In the context of this consensus reality, I am disabled, along with 2% of the population who are said to be similar. As far as society is concerned, I am invalid or invalidated. Yet as far as the world and the universe are concerned, I am not. In fact I believe it to be the opposite. That is; if god was running Centrelink humanity would be awarded an invalid pension.

Over the years I have been put at a disadvantage, yet rather than receiving assistance, I have been punished for the way I am. This is largely because I live in a different reality to what is accepted and have since I was a child. I have found the simplest things, that is the things that most people seem to take for granted, extraordinarily difficult to achieve. Labels have been helpful. But too often they can be like erecting your own prison in order to get an idea of the bars you're behind and then turning into a dove and flying back out into the sky where you were to begin with.

Labels are created in order that we explore them, learn from them and then forget them. It is reassuring to know that whoever we are is transient and whatever we create is second to the creation/or evolution that has already taken place. For example; a river and child exist whether you create art about them or not. The question is; what would you do if a child was being washed away down a river, throw in a rope or write a poem about it? You would have to a sociopath to continue writing poems about all the children who are washed away down rivers, while it is happening before your very eyes and do nothing else, or at the very least you would have to be so severely ego-centric, that you would freeze in admiration the next time you came across your own reflection. I mean how worthwhile is that kind of creation going to be and at what cost?

That fact is that through your sense of humanity, you would more than likely save the child from being washed away down the river and then you may write a poem about it later. The poem would be based upon your own experience. No one can experience what you have. That is why your words are important. Yet your actions are more important, because you are bringing love into the world and this strength will be reflected in the kind of art you create. Art follows life. It can not be the other way around. Let us not forget our humanity for the sake of art and let us not forget that the world is a child being swept down a river. There are times to make art and there are times to cherish life. It would be in the world's best interests, and therefore in our best interests and therefore in the best interests of art, if we remain humble and open to compassion.

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Q&A with the Spierigs

Peter and Michael Spierig are twins, so they finish each others' sentences; they're also on the verge of worldwide stardom, so their reserved manner is initially disarming. Undaunted, I decide to get right down to business and ask them about their film Undead – a zombie film that's about to be released both domestically and overseas. …

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David Prater experiences Roo-ku (LIVE)

LIVE: Roo-ku (Overload Poetry Festival)
Saturday 23 August 2003

I was flattered to receive an invitation last month to MC a reading put on by the Overload Poetry Festival with the mischievous title of “Roo-ku” – as in Australian haiku, or some variant of it. With fifteen readers scheduled to perform over a two hour period, I understood instantly that “directing traffic” at such an event would amount to some serious speed-MCing.

my pleasant surprise
the whole thing went off so well
no stray syllables …

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Zombie Dog

[audio:http://cordite.org.au/audio/burger_zombiedog.mp3]
'Zombie Dog' (2:24)

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Kieran Mangan ‘survives’ ‘Undead’ …

Undead
Directed by Peter and Michael Spierig
Spierigfilm, 2003

We all know this story. Locals in a small country town notice unannounced meteors plummeting to earth and then, suddenly, half the townsfolk are the living dead, and then a group of arguing outcasts are forced to band together against all odds, and then some more stuff happens and there's heaps of blood… and so on. Welcome to Undead, the debut feature flick from two Brisbane lads, Peter and Michael Spierig. Shot on a real low budget, the boys sold their cars and other worldly possessions to see their dream of real Aussie zombie terror on the big screen.

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Robert Merkin: "Draft Dodgers & Veterans"

DP: In terms of the draft – in the US, was it based on birthdays? This is my understanding of the way they did it in Australia at the time (my father narrowly missed being called up – i think it was a matter of days). It seems to me this is an even more profound aspect of the whole “living dead” thing – that your status as a 'zombie' is predicated on your day of birth … do you think a whole generation was/is in effect a generation of zombies?

RM: Oh, okay, the draft. Well, that was one fucked up way to round up a lot of testicular-Americans for universal military service …
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Justin Lowe Reviews Chris Mansell

The Fickle Brat (CD) by Chris Mansell
IP digital, 2002

Chris Mansell is a serious poet. She has an agent and a Statement of Intent, and apart from my faithful drinking partner, Tug Dumbly (who just so happens to hail from Ms Mansell's neck of the woods), I don't know any poet with an agent, and certainly none with an S.o.I. Continue reading

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Justin Lowe Reviews Michael Farrell

ode ode by Michael Farrell
Salt, 2002

I've never been prone to brand loyalty (no sniggers from the comfy chairs, please), but recently, the merest glimpse of the Salt Publishing logo has me reaching for my wallet. I love a challenge, and Michael Farrell's second verse collection ode ode continues that publishing house's burgeoning tradition of pulling the rug from under my snug size 12s.

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Robert Merkin: "Returning, We Hear the Larks"

RM: This issue's theme for Cordite is Zombie; and I have partially tried to drag it into matters regarding soldiers, and veterans who return home not yet dead but no longer fully alive. (An old student trick is to ignore any exam question you can't answer, and pretend you misunderstood the question, and merrily answer a different question that you can …
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Robert Merkin: "On Thomas Pynchon & Mass Hypnosis"

DP: Are you familiar with Thomas Pynchon's “Vineland”, in which there is a whole community of Thanatoids, who just sit around and watch TV all day? Do you have a similar view of the living dead? It's funny, I was in the US last year, and on a train heading from NYC to Buffalo, when i saw this guy sitting across from me, who I will swear to this day is/was Pynchon himself! I tried to engage him in conversation, but to the end he swore his name was Jerry. I thought it was very apt.

RM: A Pynchon sighting! Next time take the guy's snapshot! …
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First Incision

The scalpels rattle in the wooden box
as you gently set it beside the slab.
The body lies with forelegs drooping,
hooves resting just above its chest.

The first incision starts at the base of the
breastbone. You slowly cut towards the tail,
not letting the blade bite too deep,
careful not to spill the blood that remains.

As you drag the blade you feel the weight
of the bag of potato-flour in your pocket,
pressing against your leg, waiting to be
scattered over the newly-exposed flesh,

waiting to soak up the moisture that
indicates that life was once present here,
that this shape was once more than just
a cold and motionless lump of meat.

Once, these tendons shortened and pulled
at these muscles, which themselves contracted
and caused these bones to dance in complex
harmony and push this now -still form over

spitting turf and past the screaming crowd at
record speed under a crisp November sky. Once.
The winnings still linger in the bank accounts
of the prudent, but the dance is over for good.

This is where you come in. Your job is to
remind observers of the life that now has
left this form, to capture the essence that is
now departed, relying only on cold metal,

a sculptor's eye and the sturdy backs of the
three men who watch you closely as you begin
to peel the hide from blue-grey muscle,
unwrapping that which God himself has wrapped.

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Alongside

There is no grip
stricter than history.

The bare bed, the light
turned out too soon.

Where the stairs end.
A tired nightnurse doing

half-hearted rounds
past mostly empty cots.

Unfillable stillnesses.
The absence of hands

on us. The vacant breast,
no name in the only book.

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Fever Dreams

for Tom Waits

The darkness within darkness
comes and so the child in

all of us rises, after midnight,
slipperless, with no lights on.

Still asleep, he or she walks
barefoot over cold floors

headed towards warm rooms
that are never there. All

nightmares last well into the day
that follows. Attempting to

forget merely guarantees that
we will not forget. The blinds

are closed, the doors stay shut.
Shadows gather. Darkness

within darkness comes, and
so the child in all of us rises.

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Eurydice

Until
I hear otherwise
I will take it
you agree

until
I am pulled up
by a liveried messenger
or a sock full of stones

I will carry on
as before
pinning crumpled maps to your face
the minutes of ghostly meetings

hushed litanies
of the shattered and misplaced
of squandered opportunities
with the life-span of a quark

until
I hear otherwise
I will use your face
this way

quite innocently, you understand
I harbour no illusions
merely quatrains
and the sullen metre of the dead

whispering: so, poet, what do you see there now?

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Art Critic

in the storied books of Yale I flew
and metamorphosed as I ran on two
(I promise) more or less void cylinders
sputtering round as popular as Dylan Sirs
if you are read by more then he who listened errs

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Robert Merkin: "As a little introduction to me and zombies"

Robert Merkin is a writer and journalist based in Masschusetts, USA. He is the author of two books: “Zombie Jamboree” (1985, left) deals with his life as a draftee in the US military during the Vietnam war, while “The South Florida Book of the Dead” chronicles crime scenes he witnessed as a journalist in Florida in the 1980s. We contacted Robert via e-mail, requesting an interview. What follows is his four-part (mostly unprompted) response, a meditation in prose on all things Zombie, from voodoo to World War Two. As Merkin writes: “I would write my zombie thoughts in poetry, but I am, as Faulkner called all novelists, a failed poet, and I just lazily grew more comfortable with prose -”
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Elude

What I know about zombies?
Haiti invented them, as did
The US, The French, The Spaniards
slavery and the Caribs,
but mostly it was sugar.
Papa Legba or your local
houngan could have something
to say about the dearth above.
See cat people – or that other
Tournier with the canefield carrefour.
Clairvius Narcisse is the
man to find if you’re writing
an ethnobiology of the
Haitian zombe – muchas
gracias Wade Davis – would
you like a photo of him
in a domed reading room? Scour
a national geographic from 2001.
Le potan mideau – am I getting
these words right bokor?
Who went to Cuba to have
a hole dug in their kitchen,
a treasure chest revealed
and reburied – Poppy Z Brite?
Steve Austin the robot? Travels
with my Aunt? Thomas Rowlandson?
The Fon, the Fonz, Franz Fanon…
Toussaint L’Ouverture!

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Chapter 7

1008

All roads lead to other roads

62

    metamorphoses of brain damage:

The man who mistook his wife for a truck
they had a similar stress gradient
she bore her load of life badly
he lacked all emotion; his frontal lobes
had worn away like a brain-shaped
eraser; he'd lost that pencil with which we write
out the chorus of everyone else's responses to life
and sing along. I can't love you anymore she wrote
to him while in hospital, ever grinning
it's like you're there and not there
I don't care, he told the camera of his accidentally caused
lack of empathy, and she cried
on camera, and no one lied

the doctor looked on kindly
the camera and film crew watched
and so did I – in whose shoes (dress,
fingers, accident, blank screen or eyes)?

    and another:

'Rate your sadness for me,' she said to the woman, who was
trussed in a plaster cocoon like a broken leg
sensors and receptacles suspended from her to the ceiling

('I want to make you sad,' said the scientist
in her white like-a-slightly-longer-dress lab coat
'and to measure your frontal lobes')

'About a six' came a voice
whose bruise was real, if practised
large eyes staring out of old fruit sockets at the screen above

her, her words hanging spiders of text, set pain
('I'm a monster. I hate myself,'
the depressive wrote, with her fingers

typing out her saddest thoughts, quote unquote)
then while she was looking back at her thoughts
they radiographed the sadness of her brain

'I'm sad that you're sad,' the scientist then said
in her wordlessly-white, paper-white lab coat
'but I'm glad that you were sad for us';

like a child, the monster woman was still
sad but pleased to be pleasing, a little
healed, you could feel the plaster wearing lighter and

the power of science

385

Some God's elbow escarpment holds this town in to
its azure seascape, its fresh mown green back yards,
Hill's hoist, sea-saw waves and sky-blue time

a shivering pall over the death of our dead friend
whose loss we have gathered to forget, whose loss
to forget, bright eyes embrace me, you've arrived

238

Fishing for sharks
a ring of teeth
round your neck
their eyes like egg whites
boiled wider than fear
who are nicer than people
many more people
are injured each
year by their own
underwear
continues the professor
lecture theatre widening with laughter
like a maw

147

    a quartet of curses

Dean wanted a cigarette. I suggested
he watch The Curse of the Phantom Limbs instead:

They're interviewing a woman and her stump
which feels, which she feels, pain
in the fingers, though she lost it from the elbow

A hand typing in the distance, next door, on the computer

An artist interviews her too, takes photos, digital
images and then virtuals
the woman's imagined pain in, pixelling a massive swollen hand
the hand that grasped the wheel – this is imprinting
on a stick-thin arm coming out of the stump: a map of pain

the artist paints

Another is a man with no arm, but his phantom
body map has a huge thumb, a thumb for an arm

The typing stops
Dean didn't need a cigarette. He wrote a letter instead
touch typed like us

*

A man lost all sensation in his right arm
from the motorcyke smash, but his phantom hand still gripped in pain.
The eyes. Their phantom pain. The arm ungripped

(its ghostly impossible grasp. What else are phantoms
but. And so is art. This is imprinting the scientist said print. The homunculus in your brain is more you than you. Which remaps)

when he placed the one left in the black mirror box.
In a mirror your right arm is your left
a reflection of the left. So you see

both limbs, one virtual, one real, move perfectly now, as if the motorbicycle
had never cut the other off. And patients start to cry
And to lose all phantoms float away pain

to where?

*

while the black mirror box has a video restorative effect
on me too, like a phantom picture of what's virtually real
or a T.V. set (you coffin box) up turning into a pathway
to Heaven, and all our lost souls idiots

*

a cigarette
paints phantom lungs

91

There in Russia they keep their herds shut in stables, you'll see no grasses in the fields, no leaves on the trees appear.
But the land is mounds of snow, shapeless and deep
in cold, it rises as you walk all around you. It's always winter
the North-west wind is always breathing in frost.
From morning, the Sun, his horses reaching for the far skies,
never succeeds in scattering the paling shadows; his car rushes
to bathe in the red mirror of Ocean, and night the shadows revives.
Bridges of ice congeal, of a sudden, from flowing rivers. Whose waves
then carry wheels bound with iron on their backs. Having
once served ships, they now pave a way for open carts.
The cold causes bronze vessels to leap apart, clothing stiffens
when put on, they cut off blocks of frozen wine with an axe.
While pools, in their depths, turn solid ice, fierce icicles
make caves of uncombed beards, and the snow
all through the air, is all this time falling.

Virgil, Georgics III

56

The body of Bethesda: the tain of sky that floats overhead
and the walking tracks vein the land with life

inroads, humans, ring up in the mind
their binary codes, the lizard beside me, DNA-determined

he motes in the eye my silence of nature
as if the divorce I'm getting over meant as much to him

as the light at each tick of the clock of the sun
on the pool of Bethesda, silence settles, no one
was or ever will be at home

35

Walking around a
corpse makes
the path of our
conversation
difficult, trippy, little
jumps in grammar
over – excuse me

21

Sydney postcard

that bleary-faced old faith of me supping on the sober
the podium dancers were podium dancing

and the night did away with all thought of the night
yet Daedalus found it easy to fall into the Sun

did his skies slip from knowing
did the soles of his feet come undone

Hyde park spreading out its dark rug of grass
to eternity

an eye enters the harbour smashes a mallet smashes down on her face
my hand touches your breast like the wheels of the train go round and
round

14

Cleaning my teeth with a truck

7

I ate the best minds of my generation, rot
dribbled down the sides of my chin
and not throwing up
To what sight
do you shut that eye off
do you dream it to death
do you drink it all down
to one black painting
that swallows the frame

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Request

On the same day
in the alley between
Westfield and my house
appear both a carburettor
and a large plastic bag
containing something rotting.
A strip of a child's face
also appears, between
two fence planks;
she asks me to move the bag.
When I look through I see
she is holding something wet
and oval in her hand.
It looks like a closed-shell mussel
in a coat of caramel hair.
A dog leaps around her bare legs;
the girl says she had to
take it from his mouth.

A week later
the bag has ripped open.
Inside is part of a dead animal.
Grey fur;
large, cleanly cut bones.

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Matt Hetherington Reviews Jordie Albiston

The Fall by Jordie Albiston
White Crane Press, 2003

Works of art are of an infinite solitude, and nothing is less capable of reaching them than is criticism.
&#151RM Rilke, quoted in Antigone Kefala, ‘Journal III’, Heat 15, p 227

So, to avoid criticism, I offer a dialogic interplay between my own response to the work and those voices that have also spoken to me in thinking about the work. Parts of The Fall have resonated so strongly within me that I have found it futile to attempt anything like a standard critique.

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Sarah Connor’s Last Ride

tying her blonde hair behind her
left no time to resuscitate her Beamer
so watch her drive in Range Rover fear
that the wind may change direction
suck air pressure from her tyres
and blow out her lipstick holder

once she could have picked up
Arnie Schwarz or someone taller
but her make up and cucumber slices
fill the customs bin her stockings
are stuck up on the heads of teenagers
robbing milk bars for M & Ms

she's on a highway to helicopters
in fruit fly formation cross the desert
she shoos them with her hairspray
she's left a slipper on the Nullarbor
Ernie Dingo shows it to the nation
what it cost to buy this, hey?

her hair's unwinding in the bull's eye
the red centre where the dart flies
a five thousand kay pipeline pumps
gas and leftover songlines
solid rock standin on sacred ground
livin on blonde hair borrowed from a bottle

she's tied her khaki legwarmers to the aerial
that Wrong Way Go Back sign was red
not pink she didn't notice it the sand
on her windscreen the nuclear fallout
sweetening up the desert the machine
she fires into the night sky tracer bullets
blaze in white light neon

“Terminate Her Too” and a blanket falls
from heaven president Swarzenegger
(don't call him Arnie) says “Sarah,
the War is Over” they put a gas mask
on her and she spits and coughs
the taste of Chanel Number Five

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Buffy

All the evil sins in a book
Learned at Obedience School
A flag in peoples' hearts —
And people everywhere are born chained
The real bloodsucker death
Steps out of the television
When the runways extend from Hell.
Better to think of the angels above
Heaven busy with electricity.
Those departed hoons rise undead
To catch new episodes of trash tv.
Buried in a grave they crave war, sex
And machines smoothed on a screen.

In most celestial ballet Buffy kicks ass —
Thus contemplate the path made light
By Buffy meditation — athletics is a soul's power
Breaking out, unflinching and she would
Never let down a friend — you might ask Buffy
For a smidgeon of grace, be smart and quick
Kick mucho evil butt with finely scripted wit
Kick decay from our hearts Give the self
to purity ideal and your dreams
will be “wicked accurate”.

Buffy does it so it's okay to party
All night and “go through stuff” growing up and
If Buffy gets a hard time at school those vampires
Are so killed. Mumble the words of an occult prayer
So it should be with you. . . This world you do not – cannot –
Angel of the world gone to hell — déjà vu Buffy
Stake evil's heart thank her for the bliss she gives

A blood-stained shower curtain kind of love
The kind of love an angel craves.
Children take up armour, swords, crosses &
Garlic necklaces. Learn by heart the snappy
One-liners six seasons of Buffy episodes
Brought us they are powerful charms.
Late nights, warmed by the television
We shall listen to those Californian voices —
A cold wind blows from outer space.
Any ghost will tell you: Love is forever.
Light the incense now and call the spirit.
Good will triumph in her light.
Kick those demons. Kick 'em high
Buffy bless and sanctify.

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Dangers of Spilled Ink

Rorsharch bat breaks out
of white-spread card, closes in for the kill:
first puncture into self-possession.

        “So, what do you see, Mr Pitts?”
        You laugh, suddenly nervous, “A butterfly.”

Bisymmetrical wings clamp over eyes,
clammy blindfold pungent
with mammalian urine.

        “And in this one?” He is calm.
        You feign boredom, “The same.”

Vermin blot licks side of mouth,
enters to feed on prized tongue
as lips curl back in revulsion.

        “And now? Mr Pitts? Mr Pitts??!!”
        His impatience makes you falter, “But-ter-fly!”

Vulture bats wing overhead.
Flies buzz in and out cavernous ears.
In the room, a carcass lies in wait.

        “Still a butterfly?” He sneers.
        “Yes!” You lunge to devour his tongue.

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James Stuart Interviews Pierre Brulleacute

Don't let the relative coherence of these interviews fool you: when I conducted them I hadn't spoken French regularly for at least six or seven years. That aside, I had barely engaged with the world of poetry in Australia over the past two. All this added up: playing back the three hours or so of recordings from the interviews was an at times painful experience in which I had to cyclically shake my head at botched phrasings of the most simple questions or comments in French.

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