Read The Best Australian Poems 2011 Online
Authors: John Tranter
Tags: #The Best Australian Poems 2011, #Black Inc., #John Tranter, #9781921870453
It is worth knowing a fever at 38, so far.
Catching the calls of the boss beckoning from streets
all the way down. Sniff him out. Down some street, again.
Yellow chairs and new fruit. Winter knows nothing.
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No crater
for 39 degrees, and shifting, for want of sweat.
Hvolsvelli, Britain. Marriage. Weddings and
the listless absent. Too hot even to touch bride,
even to touch groom. Better to be 39 and a half
losing sleep if winter is to be left to the previous
three months and we are to learn the trails of
longer walks. Smoke like mist for months.
No ash for days. Made it up from the blanket lounge.
Ate found cheese at the left fire. Late Pound trees
of the cleft liar. Date-mound knees draped with bereft
attire. Good company to be having, fishermen far off
enough that we eat their catch and hardly seen as they
board towering blue waves. Success. Coast, off the coast.
Off the coast, to the coast, to return by skeins. 40.
To be 40. Lining the river with college canoes. Better
yet, honest pumice soil. Sinking by the feet. 41. One
more down. Eventually, it will be hot enough to start something.
We're scribbles at the margin of
nothing: that is to say
the edges of a sound-bite's edge,
altogether unreal as time
itself. The self that isn't there,
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but when we hear a playing of
Chopin's miraculous ballades
we're not so little, nor so mean,
teetering on the fringe of space.
Our clock has been turned over, and
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this music entertains the spheres,
as Shakespeare or Donne would have said
from quite another dispensation,
yet both had a hunch that we could be
only the tennis-balls of the stars.
Particularly adoring of wisteria
              Tiffany invented the system
of steel cables over lawns
from which their pendulous purples devolved
              like inverted tightrope walkers.
Matching lead to glass, he would say
Art is man's nature; nature is God's art
              which could have suited Miss Moore
              who might space it thus:
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Art is man's nature; nature
                                          is God's art
          from which beginning
                                          she would leap
                                          over skyscrapers of obstacles
              and fly down tangents
                            into luminous observations
                                          and curious obdurate facts
such as whether macaws shed tears
or cranes stand on one leg
                            longer than a child ever could.
              How we miss her and these facts
                            carried out like a tray of glasses
                            from the
Scientific American
              to us at the poolside sunlit page.
How we miss her frank primness,
Since no one has replaced
              this princess of praxis
                            this patron of exemplars
                                          this sterling silver
scissors and paste adept who would, on discovering, say
                                          the prodigious word
             Â
psilanthropism
, show no fear
and blithely proceed to orchestrate the idea
              of Christ as mere male. Orchestration
              for light chamber orchestra
                            was her fortepiano
              and we relished her scale passages
with their unexpected trills and tremolos and shakes.
                                          Who amongst us now
                            can still remember
              those days of favourable Faber weather
              when Managing Director Captain Editor Eliot
                            was flying the Union Jack
              and steering the ship amongst chthonic seas?
              Who amongst us remembering
                            that paper and that font
                            and that generous severity
              will not regret those dappled waters,
                                          the outrunning tide
in which she proposed shallow sunlit sandwaves,
              little platforms, atolls and lily pads
                            round which cephalopods
                            (molluscs with tentacled heads)
              and ctenoids (fish with comb-like scales)
happily lap or paddle
              amongst Japanese paper flowers?
              And just as scents cannot be recalled
                            the way visual memory floods,
and the overwhelming perfume of wisteria at dusk
                            cannot be remembered,
              so no one has replaced or revived
              the acute licorice tinctures
and memorable vanilla windows of Miss Moore.
Yes, I walked from Room 3
and down across the small bridge,
saw fingerlings there,
and along the harbour's curve
to its chrome edge,
a woman is laughing and telling
a story about her funny friends;
everything that happens to them
is so funny, and then the way
they tell the story; it is so funny;
I find her rather sad.
She is manning her stall
like a seagull, no one wants
to buy what she has; she wants
them to. She fusses over stall space.
A Jungian bus trip descends,
one of them my mother's stand-in.
I sit to write a letter, to organise
my thoughts, to withdraw
from contention, to close the practice.
I mention the absinthe sea
and liken the posting, the gift of it,
the perversity of a message in a bottle
being addressed to someone.
A Tasmanian waterfall in the top
right corner, twice. Surplus, five cent
platypuses in my coin purse,
bound for an international post,
float like displacement.
Dreams: lived, dreamt and composed for Ken Bolton
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1.
A loft on the US West Coast. Out of a window the sun sinks into the Pacific whilst Charles Bukowski is reading in Catullian mode. âHey Catullus, you cocksucker!' he emotes. I tell him he is a fraud but an amiable fraud. He replies that no one has ever spoken to him like that and thus he respects me.
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2.
Peter Skrzynecki is digging in his backyard. It is an overcast day. His neighbour Judith Beveridge is looking over the fence. Peter glances up. âHey Judith,' he asks, âyou dig?' Thinking this some kind of innuendo Judith announces she is going to call the police. They never arrive. Peter keeps digging.
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3.
I am in a Chinese restaurant with Geoff Page, Alan Gould, Les Murray and an Anglican bishop (in mufti) who has written a life of Harold Holt. Murray and I sit next to each other, both ordering a âNum Duck'. A lot of the conversation is about Harold Holt. I consider telling them about the weird sequence on the former PM written by my one time student Jason Gunst (which was nothing like the Holt I recall!) but instead tell them of Monash student Mick Cahill telling me in 1968 âAhh they were on acid. I know some of that crowd and they were all on acid.' Then Murray stands up, tells some kind of gag and does a strange little dance.
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4.
Geoff Eggleston and Shelton Lea are elected Labor members of the Federal Parliament, and although both are deceased no one seems to mind. Geoff is content to be a humble backbencher but Shelley's ambitions are stymied by the PM, who tells him that because of his rather colourful past he won't obtain a ministry. Still, they are willing to offer him the post of Speaker. âThat'll do me, brother,' says Shelley. The Liberal members are a bit bewildered by Speaker Lea though the Nationals are seduced by his rough hewn charm.
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5.
A nightmare. I am on a plane, daylight outside. All is quiet, very quiet. As if in preparation for an exam every passenger is reading the same Bryce Courtenay novel.
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6.
John Forbes, Gig Ryan and I are in what must be a thirties screwball comedy. John is pursuing Gig, Gig is replying with many witty lines (none of which I can remember) whilst I am in an Edward Everett Horton-style support. This dream is all mood.
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7. (
for Jodie Magee
)
At the age I am now I have become a barrister. It is my first case and I am defending a man in Horsham who has allegedly murdered his wife. Robert Richter QC is prosecuting and this fills me with certain apprehension. I am also anxious about the questions I will ask and how I shall address the jury. At some stage I get into an innocuous conversation about Horsham with a rather dowdy female jury member, later thinking âI shouldn't have done that, I hope no one finds out.' But my biggest worry centres on combining the careers of poetry and the law. Then an answer to this problem arrives in the person of Robert Richter. âWelcome to the bar my learned friend,' he says. âI'm glad you're here because I've just started writing poetry and I'd love your opinion on what I've written.'
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8.
I am in Lisbon. It is night and I am walking around with Alvaro de Campos who is raving in Scots accented English. Eventually I get to ask him âWhat's it like being a heteronym?' He replies that
he
isn't a heteronym, the heteronyms are Albert Caeiro, Riccardo Reis and Fernando Pessoa, and that he, de Campos, invented them. Since he has spent time in Glasgow I ask him his opinion of Robbie Burns. I am told that Burns too is one of his heteronyms.
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9.
The houses are a brilliant white, the sky an even more brilliant blue and Pi O is an exuberant village barber, forever singing. The villagers get him to compose songs for their weddings and he does though he won't attend the services which are run by his arch-enemy the village priest. Neither of them will walk on the same side of the street. End of dream.
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10.
The early seventies. Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti  are invited to tour Down Under but forgo the experience. Then some very enterprising literary entrepreneur achieves what one newspaper describes as âWhat once was thought impossible': bringing Dante Gabriel Rosetti and Algernon Charles Swinburne to Australia. Rosetti, a quiet, gloomy man suffers from jet lag the entire time leaving the running to his colleague. And Swinburne in his green velvet suit and big red afro is an enormous hit: Bob Adamson and Vicki Viidikas meet him at Sydney Airport, sceptics like Nigel Roberts and Laurie Duggan are won over and of course the Tranters have him round for dinner. Then in Melbourne things get even more frantic. A sell out at La Mama has a massive crowd clamouring well into Faraday Street. With a near carnival ensuing the police block off Faraday at Lygon and Drummond. Emboldened Swinburne climbs onto the back of a truck and gives forth with some of his greatest hits. âCome down and redeem us from virtue,/Our Lady of Pain,' he declaims. And in spite of, or because of him sounding very much like bad imitation Dylan his audience is in positive uproar. The Pre-Raphaelite revival is on and Australian poetry will never be the same.
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11.
The 1950s. The lamps are down low in a large London living room for a meeting of âThe Room' a collection of poets somewhat like âThe Movement' and âThe Group'. In the garb and accoutrements of the day (pipes, ties, elbow patches etc) they are all very earnest young men except for one very earnest young woman. One of their number reads a poem which I gather is in praise of Mantovani, this being greeted with slow smiles. Then another tells the young woman that he is going to make a risqué comment. She nods and although I don't quite hear the comment I see her smiling. How young and earnest they are!
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12
The mid seventies. Sir John Suckling and the Earl of Rochester are both hip high school teachers: Suckling laid back in Phys. Ed and Rochester perpetually stoned in Art. Rochester gets upbraided by the principal for making a joke about Suckling's surname which has resulted in the Phys. Ed teacher being called Mr Blowjob throughout the school. Suckling though takes a âYeah man well whatever â¦' attitude. Rochester also gets into a certain trouble by taking nude photos of Year 12 girls and boys. A decade or so later dying of AIDS he is received into the evangelical outreaches of Christendom by the Rev. Fred Nile. Two decades on from that his photos mysteriously appear on the Web.
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13.
George Herbert is a well meaning sixties suburban vicar who runs a Youth Fellowship following Sunday Evensong. Contemporary folk music is played and although this sometimes bewilders Rev. Herbert he still tries enjoying it. The kids love him and call him Herbie. When a smart alec interloper tries interrupting the vicar with stand up comedy lines à la Bob Newhart or Shelley Berman the kids become quite vehement: âYou leave Herbie alone!'
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14.
Ivor Indyk and I are taking Alexander Pope on a tour of the Sydney Writers' Festival, which in this case is a kind of sideshow alley. Pope is smallish, though not the misshapen midget I've read about and this slightly bewilders me. Nevertheless I have a feeling of trust about the man, if not the situation as the Sydney Writers' Festival have not invited Pope and thus he is our special, secret guest. My apprehension remains and increases as I try recalling, but can't, Pope quotations that I could recite to the great man. When Pope is distracted by what appears to be a poetry slam in a large tent (and this too is an embarrassment) I confide my anxieties to Ivor who reassures me that Pope hasn't come all this way in time and space just to hear his own words, and as for poetry slams well the author of âThe Dunciad' can accommodate anything! And it seems he can. Coming back from the slam tent Pope has a large grin, ear-to-ear.