Read The Best Australian Poems 2011 Online
Authors: John Tranter
Tags: #The Best Australian Poems 2011, #Black Inc., #John Tranter, #9781921870453
Began my search in middle-age: for the drunk with florid face gazing
from a grainy photo. First your gravesite, words wearing
away from the slippery stone both smooth and blanched. Website
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offering wartime records touted the existence of medals
that would never be recovered. Verified you married in London
and brought home the bride. During the war you were court-martialled
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for insubordination, often arrested on premises out of bounds.
But gambling dens or brothels? I don't know which. My mother supplied
some snippets: knowledge barely covering thirty minutes
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â let alone those thirty mislaid years. Your brick-making trade demolished
by the Depression, you chased jobs you could seldom grasp, scampered
from house to house before landlords clobbered you for their rent.
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Your only sport, the Australian Crawl through an ocean of booze, cascading
down the bars of Adelaide's public houses. Loss of an eye laying pipes provided
compensation, and furniture finally arrived for the family. Furniture
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my mother had only seen on the cinema screen. Your wife at forty died lonely
and homesick in this foreign land. Ironically, from a weakened heart
â though most conceded it had really been broken. Disintegration
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of immediate family followed, then the dalliance with a sodden neighbour.
And I was puzzled by your urgent quest for a life in the west, only to return
and die painfully, a few months later. I questioned and researched
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but found no account of this time: where you went, what you did. And the one
who might have remembered has now joined you on the other side. Rumours filtered
down your new wife was killed by a car after visiting your grave. But she left
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no death certificate, nor paper trail I could follow. It's as if she vanished
with the remainder of your whisky-stained notes, and drowned herself
in a billabong of booze in some obscure corner of your tarnished empire.
It is late at night when the Primitives emerge.
They withdraw their cash and go marketing abroad.
Strung with small hard parcels Malice rushes in.
She joins Obsession, Hate, Revenge.
They fuss about dressed in puce, red, yellow.
They stay their hand and while they prevaricate
Doubt sidles by without a word.
Panic takes off and hails an outbound bus.
Anxiety tries it on for size but rarely buys â
The price is never right and she can't negotiate.
Fear's on a bargain hunt but stuffs the whole deal up.
They will not seize the hour â
Uncanny, unlucky bedfellows.
(When asked if there was an example who had inspired her as Dietrich Bonhoeffer inspired Kevin Rudd, Julia Gillard replied âNye Bevan')
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Aneurin Bevan woke up in flat Bathurst, to the drone
of Julia Gillard's âBen Chifley, Light on the Hill'
speech as she condescended that Chifley
always regretted his lack of âa great education'.
Bevan had left school at thirteen, self-taught proudly
like Chifley. He wondered if Gillard ever knew
the power of freely chosen knowledge. When young,
he'd detested that chainstore quality he called
âEverything in its place and nothing above
sixpence.' She liked âuniversality of education', her faith
in uniforms startling to a man who thought
socialism meant avoiding them, her stress
on educational achievements hollowly passim
insisting one acknowledge all her own. He thought
of Chifley and Evatt roasting baked potatoes
on a Murray houseboat, each free of envy
of the other's erudition. Then his irritation
became pity when he pictured Gillard
Welshly stiff in a little uniform, Welsh-mam-bossy
like his own mother, or nervously flirty, that old anxiety
of women for respect in crisis leaping
at their throats like blazer emblems,
unable to orate as he had: to think swiftly
on the spot, as his hand pressed on his heart.
Over the fence my newest neighbour greets me
swathed in her pet python (green and gold:
a good two metres). Never in a million years
could I pick up a thing like that. I've always had
an absolute horror of snakes of any kind.
Go on, she says, he'll let you stroke him.
Her hair twines down in ringlets, dark and sinuous.
I stroke him. He feels like a rather expensive handbag.
The snake lady's arms are silken and not like a handbag at all.
You were too good to cry much over me.
And now I let you go. Signed, The Dwarf.
                     âJOHN ASHBERY
I'm presuming, I know (just as winter will
unite enemies in spring, betray soporific words
left a tiny bit unhingd &, all gilt, such paroxetine
somnolence weakly ornamented â I thought
error might better pass enclosd, your coercion
somewhat sluiced by a subigated rose, an ouevre's
brocaded recitations, garlands left dishevelled
in the fog; my foliate despair (a locket) shows
(ingenious as mind-control ordaind by queer cherubs)
a Sun King smiling radiant while drawing
unself-conscious blancs from her morphine powderd
throne, an asthenic coterie (kept glad of work!)
laying about the cruel enclosure with studied
cartouchés, eyelids clasping inlaid silver birds.
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So, the reason why I right up Verse, ills aside,
and carry charmd totes inside this bird of paradox,
informants gushing tedious and jocund, is, honey,
instrumental â the republic, enamelld & reductive,
its interiors' consigned affiliations, slops of law
and capital's bulbous, cordial seductions
grant lip service to this beguiling inheritance
(materialist, undetermin'd, in arrears) common sense
depositary and melamine;
Wallpaper
faces
unletterd & besmirchd by mismated possibility
drift across the onerous couch, a city wakes bedazzld
by the birth of a gildd, stirrupd fricatrice.
The reason for this mise en scène is, you know
'cause we live like worms) & think to like it.
As the tractor-exhaustâ¨
vistas of desert skyâ¨
resume the south aheadâ¨
the farmer and his familyâ¨
are moving to the city
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in debt and crusted clothâ¨
at the river's speedâ¨
close but not togetherâ¨
going and reappearingâ¨
under the raft of noon
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moving to the city
If only I spoke Mandarin
like a peasant, I'd say to the waiter
who compliments my crap Hanzi
copy of the restaurant name, âI could do better
if only I had prepared'
(great deathbed confessions: if only â¦).
I'd take my time,
learning how to speak like a child
and not pretend. Great translations
take gall and humility in equal measure.
I feel like putting up my hand
and asking for an extension
or another serving of the eggplant dish.
Meanwhile, Laurie is hacking into Les again;
downstairs, a banshee scream
of a little emperor thwarted.
âIt's death,' my aunt says, âand he's
reading your poems.'
Frank Sinatra sings âunforgettable'Â
A raven, half a grove of poplars after wake
one receives news that one is gone
morse calls, toll calls and black
I stand on the ground of the displaced, scything the tufts
dawn bells â mathematical series of grey, and shades
after deaths.
Old People's House washed over with chinawhite fineness
art deco lines and the never-never-mind
a fire, left overnight, burnt to ground, wisps
cataract sky hanging low with a few decoys
one that was my father's ghost
on the mindsets of the villagers, his kin.
Of calligraphy, a word wrested
itself out of the mace of a young monk
wrote itself a wing and pressed hard a final dot
on the floor of the freshly dug grave, soft as flesh â
goodness returns to goodness â lush waves of wild grass rolling.
Under faded clouds, grains of my childhood
now I enter a Greek Orthodox house of worship in Kingston
swim in the rising tongues
of islands and archipelagos and the upturned seas
bathed in a hologram, sun washing over years and feet
held in caring hands, then
cut, roped, shifted, hanged up, nailed, in, out, under, over
dirt â warm, ever so, breathing
Down there by the fence is where everybody goes
to have sex.              Back to first nothingness,
a soapbox shouting, its own goalkeep,
scores, falling into conception: to posit
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the use of fire as a universal right ⦠a different
coat of arms for each insect.
But how combine
individual responsibility with a sense
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of community, as the tone, fine-tuned, combines
brightness and power? See, this
is just the discussion we've been needing
to have, like, do we believe in love?              & if God is love,
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             â¢Â       maybe we should be worshipping him?
             â¢Â       & if so, in what way precisely?
                     â
                     â
                     â
                     â
Turning it over
it's no coincidence
that the famous Tom Roberts painting
Holiday sketch at Coogee, 1888
preserved here in postcard form
is also the same view of the very fence post
where Christ's mother appeared to the people of Coogee
on those heated, sunstruck afternoons.
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In the painting no one on the beach is nude.
People stroll the shore under parasols.
Cliffs in the distance, minus bathing baths.
Impressionism captures haze so well.
No shark has vomited up a tattooed arm in the aquarium.
No distant world wars. Not even a ravenous gull.
No cynical fence post, either, to deflect
the sunbright glare of Coogee's vision splendid.
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It is as if the figure that might be Our Lady (dressed
in black) is picnicking,
surveying distant figures across the hot sand.
The sky beautiful as a bruise,
the waves petrified tulle frozen in paint.
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Yet motion is what's wanted
as Our Lady of Coogee finally stands up,
black as pitch,
brushes crumbs from her holy shroud
amidst the fish and chip wrappings,
the apparition's vandalised fence post,
and opens her arms in wonder
at the miracle of real estate.
kicking in windows like old tvs
lasso some hose to scatter stray
hosts of morning tv, the kind
who're evangelical about anything
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the day began with the question
of how to fold the labour
â simultaneous declaration
              of necessary breeze â
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suburban magnolia puts on a show
âon you frills lose their cuteness'
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our street lacks verticality
              thus becomes a drive by
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optimistic housetags
e.g. call it
FLORIDA
              & the cubist palm trees
                     will grow in Moonee Ponds
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living close to the tracks
just to know things are going
(or that you can get going)
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these things that are the same as
looking at your own handwriting
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go upstairs to practice  baton twirls,
a double-hander flag routine
              & other choreographed delights
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radio waves stirring the pond
where ducks collect surface dross
switching easily between
              air & gelatinous water
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with an eye to the cinematic
a swan lands gracelessly
              spraying mud, bits of weed
                     but making me think of a version of Zeus
              as rendered by Rubens
                     (all white feathers pressed
                            indecently on creamy thighs)
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poor Leda not yet
                     hip to the ruse