Friday, November 19, 2010

life is a small boat that sails out into the ocean and sinks

The Most Uncertain Person I Know

In the juvenile morning, over morning breath;

She asks, “Well, what was that? Was that sex?”

She checks her bible and I reach over our mess

For the dictionary by the bed.

Under “es”.

“Your definition? Sex or accident?” She flicks

Through her New Testament

To confess, “I’m agnostic.”

While we wait for the morning mist to clear

I say, “You may make your mistakes with me.”

.

.

.

In the waiting room, with the faithful invalids

I wait for health and the doctor to call,

To click her definite heels down the corridor.

Am I sick or am I well?

She shuffles symptoms, fans them in her hands

And takes a gamble.

Do not fret doctor, I am simple.

My belief is limp. No need to convince me with your career;

You may make your mistakes with me.

.

.

.

At Five the patrons leave the art gallery stark

And empty. The paintings readjust their layers

Fold in their meanings, say their prayers

And contemplate one another across the dark hall.

And they call,

“I do not understand.”

“What do you mean?”

“Do you mean anything at all?”

And one painting opens to the limits of his frame

To say,

“I’m here, make your mistakes with me.”

.

.

.

With my dictionary held between ribs and elbow

I am presented to a Bible study.

Allan is the most uncertain person I know.

My dictionary a pious blue, a sacred weight, with certain columns.

Uncertainty is a regular state, for me.

They tell me to explain love. I turn to “L”

I consider a man who looked down from his column

And said, “Have peace you can make your mistakes with me.”

Saturday, October 16, 2010

I practice forgetting and sometimes I fail

Now her breath smells like Saturday night. Sophie spits her chewing gum into the street. She has left behind the day and the words from the day are gone. Her mouth is clean and her neck, it also smells like Saturday night. Her neck smells like a perfume that she bought but that she does not wear often. She gives her driver's licence into the big fingers of the man at the door of the club, his eyes are upon her driver's licence and then glancing up, his eyes are upon her; she smiles as though she were the glowing sign to a motel with many empty rooms. The man at the door returns her licence to her. His job is practice. She practices her smile on his face before she goes inside. The music plays so loudly that when she orders a drink she must stand on her toes so her voice is closer to the barman's ear. His job is also for practice, for her to practice her smile on him. She is here by herself. There is a woman by the wall who is wearing a perfume that Neil gave to Sophie but that she is not wearing tonight. Sophie's earrings are feathers made of silver and coloured metal. She looks at the woman who wears the familiar perfume and thinks mutton dressed as lamb, and then thinks, what a quaint phrase, a phrase for grandmothers who are divorced and for camp boys. The music beats away at the daytime worries of them all and excites their night time concerns. When a man nods at her and smiles for a fraction of the nod she thinks, his night time concern is what he is going to say to me.

‘What bird did those come off?" he asks.

"Excuse me?"

"Your earrings; they must've come from a beautiful bird. Why, what'd you think I said?"

"I thought you were being crude, but you’re sweet." She turns her head so that he can see her earrings and he brushes them with a slightly drunk fingernail. "A silver bird," she tells him.

"You should finish your drink so that I can get you a new one," he says.

"And you should be patient," she says and she pats him on his chest. She thinks, when men are drunk they are like little boys. I don't know if I like being around so many little boys. She thinks, I do like not knowing whether I like it or not. I'd like to tell this boy my thought on drunken men, but he might not understand it." So she says to him, "What do you know about birds?"

"I don't know anything about birds, but I know what I like."

She watches the woman wearing the familiar perfume lean over and talk to one of her girlfriends and cackle like a witch. A benign, foolish witch. I wish that this man would make me laugh so loud that I forgot myself, she thinks. "You can buy me a drink, now," she says. She gives her empty glass to him so he can find a place for it. He looks at it not knowing why he is holding it, "Whatever you’re having," she tells him. He is still looking at the empty glass so she gives him a push towards the bar.

"Where are your mates?" Sophie asks him. Her voice still hurts. Some parts of the day cannot be spit out easily.

"I don't know. I lost them at another club. Too many people dancing. Who're you here with?"

"Just you."

"So, did your boyfriend give you those earrings?"

"If he did, then I wouldn't be wearing them. Can't you dance?"

"So you've got a boyfriend then."

"A girlfriend bought me these earrings in Vietnam."

"Vietnam? I've been to Bali. I bet that you're really good at dancing."

"I'm good enough."

"Maybe you should teach me. Show me some dance moves."

"Maybe later," she says. He tells her about his holiday in Bali. They talk about holidays. I wish I didn't come here by myself tonight. And I wish that I did not use all the credit on my phone talking to Neil. I wish someone would call me, she thinks.

The man stumbles to the bathroom and to buy another drink. He comes back to her with a drink for her as well. I don't want another drink.

"So you know you're really beautiful." he says to her. He won't make me laugh tonight.

“Yes, I know," she says. He reaches out and holds her upper arm. Your arms are large and blunt, she thinks. He pulls her closer to him and dips his head.

"Only on the cheek" she says and she turns her cheek to him, the silver feather swings a little from her earlobe. He kisses her cheek. He doesn't know how to kiss a woman's cheek. He is too used to open drunk wet mouths. The woman wearing the same perfume that Neil gave to me probably has a drunk wet mouth. When it comes to cheeks, he kisses me the way a boy kisses his grandmother's cheek; because he is confused he is nervous and quick. The man is disappointed with how his lips brushed her cheek and he pulls her towards him to try again.

"No, wait," she says.

"So you do have a boyfriend then."

"Not a boyfriend," she says.

"One more."

"No more. There's a woman over there, she look like she wants one more." She points to the woman wearing Neil's perfume. Sophie is a barman shutting up shop with a face that is tired of saying welcome to the smiles of stranger after stranger. Like a barman who does not want to make people forget about their day any longer, and wants his bar to be empty. "I'm tired. I had a long day," she says to the man. I did not want to bring today into tonight, she thinks. "And I need to go home," she says.

"So I'll take you home." He is in earnest, he takes his night time concerns so seriously, she thinks. His face is like that of a little boy who is remembering that he has learnt that the world is not fair.

"I need to go home by myself." She pats his chest. The pat, that is something that a grandmother would do.

He starts to say, "You should come to-" Sophie cuts him off.

"I have a husband with a very big gun, and he's waiting for me." She smiles at him and walks away.

xxxx

They are both standing by the dining table and she is talking. Outside, Sophie's taxi pulls away, empty, from the kerb by Neil's house and the light on top turns on as it turns into the dark street. Inside, she is standing there and Neil looks at her and he has one hand in each of the back pockets of his jeans. She reaches for the tissue box that is on Neil's dining room table and takes two for wiping the perfume from her neck.

"I'm not your husband, And I don't have a very big gun."

"No. But I thought that I would not think of you and then I did and it surprised me."

"What did you think?"

"I thought, I want you to come and rescue me."

"You were thinking of someone else. I don't have a big gun."

"No. I was thinking of you. You have other things."

"We don't have enough to make it work, you said. And I said yes."

"Yes. But there's enough for tonight."

She gives the tissues to Neil. She walks towards his room and he puts the tissues into his pocket and from behind her he kisses her on the neck.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods;
They kill us for their sport.

(from King Lear 4.1.37,38)

Monday, June 14, 2010

Why I Write

When a writer writes, does he write for his audience? And when he is writing a love poem, is he writing for his beloved?

Or does he write for himself? Does he write to study his own expression?

Neither can be correct.

If he wrote for his audience, then within his mind's eye, he would sit within the head of the audience and there would be no honesty in that; he would invent his audience's reviews. And writing above all must be honest. If he wrote his poems for the woman who would read them, the whole exercise would be guess-work; he would chase the reception he hoped for from the woman (a kiss, a roll in the hay). He would not chase anything true. I doubt he really knows her, whoever she is; whoever he is.

If the writer wrote for himself, then where is the directive to draft and redraft? Does he chase his own perfection? That is endless and selfish. Does he chase his desire for expression or a need to respond to the world? Then he should write a diary, keep it beside his bed and be done with it.

No. This is my perspective. The writer writes for God.

There are writers who do not write for God- they write for the integrity of their characters. They write for the worship of words or in praise of a philosophy such as hopelessness or truth. And when they place their manuscript on the altar, then they pray that their characters, their culture's words, the internal logic of their philosophies smile down on their offering.

But I think of God, the only audience member in an auditorium of folded-up red seats, sitting for the premiere of every writer and juggler and architect and painter, and accepting every piece with holy applause.

So, as for my inconsistent correspondence; do not feel flattered or offended. I don't write for you, I write for God.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


taxes
children
lost pussy
war
constipation

the living poet
in his harness
of beauty

offers the day
back to g-d

Leonard Cohen

Friday, May 28, 2010

Poetry makes nothing happen

When I am more alert, I will ask why I write.





'Why I Write' by Bronwyn Lea







And I will consider the poet's job.

It's the Poet's Job
It's the poet's job to remain forever outside
and forever ridiculed.
To alienate his family and friends,
to be petty and jealous and spiteful,
to fail miserably, show his soft underbelly and
grin like an idiot,
to be like Jesus Christ, Judas and the Buddha.
To chase his own tail,
avoid prizes, accolades and rewards
and never become celebrated.
Wild Billy Childish














And I will wonder what poetry does.

"You were silly like us; your gift survived us all:
The parish of rich women, physical decay,
Yourself, Mad Ireland hurt you into poetry.
Now Ireland has her madness and her weather still,
For poetry makes nothing happen: it survives
In the valley of its own making where executives
Would never want to tamper, flows on south
From ranches of isolation and the busy griefs,
Raw towns that we believe and die in; it survives,
A way of happening, a mouth."
From "In Memory of W.B. Yeats" by W.H. Auden



















But tonight, because I am not alert, but very sleepy, I will think about the wrong draft of an old story I gave to friend, a draft which collapses in on itself in the last section, and which I later tried to fix up. I think about Bronwyn Lea who took a poetry subject I studied at uni, and how disappointed I was at how cosmopolitan she looked, that she wore makeup and that she wore a Dolce&Gabbana belt, when I want people who call themselves poets to be plain, with no time for the frivolous. Tonight I will think about Wild Billy Childish who featured in Tracy Emin's work, "Everyone I have ever slept with 1963-1995," and with whom he shared gonorrhea and herpes.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

I'm not a bird you catch and release.
Damien Jurado- Last Rights

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

All the hymns
I sing are
goodbye songs
for the sins
I've loved.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

A poem and two newspaper articles that birthed it.

A Tree

This is where the city finishes.
This is where fences sink in dust
around the civic cemetery on the fringes.
These are the trees that pray
for the frustrated souls underneath.
This is where tombstones grin
like old men's teeth.
This is where old men sleep uninterrupted,
Where I built my pillar of sins.

This is where the city finishes,
The city where I fathered my children,
Sipped drinks with silly women teaching
girls to giggle, listened to fights,
practiced my spitting and steered
the little wife
down our Sunday drive in the evening.
As the sun sinks
She's a denim clad minx.

This is where the city finishes
and insects own the kitchen.
The wife listens to Country and Western
as I rinse the dishes
and watch her jeans
torn at the ankle, hitched
on the ripped fly wire screen.
Her hair is lank, her wrinkles
Open into eyes or a smile.

When will I leave the city
with my two pairs of boots
and her jewelry?

When will she leave,
riding shotgun
with the man who lights her cigarette?

When we undress for bed
I wear my body like a threat.

This is where the city finishes
by the cemetery where we interred
my father when he felt
that fifty years was sufficient.

This is where the city finishes
Where I wait by my father's plot
when desire keeps me up all night
and the wife stays out late.

This is where the city finishes,
Where I can't sleep for jealousy
And I offer my children as Christmas angels
to the cemetery trees.

Sydney Morning Herald
The Monthly

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Fashion culture, about which I know nothing, fascinates my most unsociable moods. The models, nothing more than clotheshorses for the outfits they wear, symbolise a belief in art above humanity, perhaps the same belief that prompted Andy Warhol to say of a friend who committed suicide, "I wish he'd told me so I could have filmed it."

If only life were cut from such simple fabric.

Suicide- Andy Warhol
I always become jealous when my waitress takes orders from another table.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Patient as a farmer
Patient as a mathmetician
Patient as revenge
Patient as a convalescent

Patient as a tree
Patient as a prisoner
Patient as a sunken ship

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

a story about love and desperation




In the 19th Century, whiling away their quiet hours on 12 month voyages, whalers carved illustrations of the women they left behind into whale teeth and bones. The artwork, called scrimshaw, captures the leisure time of sailors away from home and families, who pursued their fortunes in the blood and fat of sperm whales.




Ships carried up to 36 men, sailing sometimes two years away from home, away from wives and children and lovers. Ships of men scoured the sea for signs of whales, men who at the sighting of a whale were lowered in small boats and gave chase with oarstrokes, judging where the whale would next surface they hove to, a harpooner prepared to throw his weapon into the animal's flank. Harpoons were attached by rope to the boats which were dragged after the whale as it bucked and dove and finally died. The whale was towed back to the ship, lifted by it's flukes, stripped of its blubber, and the blubber shoveled into kettles where it was melted down into oil. A sperm whale could deliver over 100 barrels of oil. Whale products were sold and the wealth divided amongst the crew. From the early 1700s until the 1850s whaling was a major industry; whale oil lubricated the machines that ushered in the Industrial Revolution.



Whaling ships carried weather beaten men watching the sea to war against an animal, to open it up, to unpack its harvest of oil which offered a glossy sheen to cosmetics, was used for face and hand creams and created the finest soap. Candles made from spermaceti from the sperm whale illuminated intimate dinners and neither smoked nor smelled. Baleen, tooth and bone were used in corset stays, in the hoops for skirts, hairbrushes and jewellery. Ambergris became perfume and love potions. The wild whale was transformed into delicate articles of femininity. Scrimshaw captured images of lost sweethearts and filled hours which held nothing else but the smell of whale flesh.


In beards and sweat, isolated, having seen no women since their last stop at port, men clung to sails for a sight of an animal to fight until it would forfeit its treasure of undergarments and ladies' scent.


The whale gives himself up, thrashing, to the power of desire.



"Geese are monogamous, whales are essentially unfaithful" -The World Council of Whalers. (
http://www.worldwhalers.com/ A website that includes whale recipes).