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The Fremantle Press Anthology of Western Australian Poetry

Page 21

by John Kinsella


  — Bless your magical hands!

  She says to the one

  who complains about her alcoholic husband

  — Be patient with him

  until he has reached his limit.

  She emphatically says to another one

  — There is no advantage

  in a man who is a gambler

  or

  idle

  or

  addicted to hashish.

  Her throaty voice follows me

  when she closes the wattle door

  with its usual squeak

  — Come back before sunset.

  Don’t attack anyone,

  but if someone smacks your right cheek

  offer him as many smacks

  and punches as you can;

  never come back to me complaining

  or

  crying.

  At nightfall

  she lets me sip from her delicious tales

  of dwarves and giants

  pirates and Sinbad

  fairies of the woods

  snakes biting like people

  and witches more beautiful than mermaids

  who, at harvest time

  marry the young villagers

  then suddenly disappear

  leaving their husbands’ bones

  scattered near the bindweed.

  I sleep and dream about her

  and about bats talking

  they tell me

  what happens in the world while I sleep.

  Every day after her tales

  I dream about her;

  I sleep and dream about her.

  On one suffocating morning

  I am not woken

  by her devout humming for us all

  but

  by laments!

  David McComb (b.1962 d.1999)

  Behind the Garages of this Country

  Behind the garages of this country

  there are tyres choked by grass. Sad.

  But, listen, there’s

  a woman behind the counter

  selling petrol and road-food.

  You can count on her;

  Underwritten by a weariness

  two thousand miles across,

  limbs set to burst with dust.

  She’ll be serving here

  (looking out the back door

  at the tinstrip toilets)

  this time next year.

  Still here? Still here,

  bone tired, grass-stricken

  Waiting for cinders or for rain

  Fingering soiled loose change,

  Oil and oil-grime caught

  in grins, ears, frown lines, transit lanes.

  Beaten by no flood

  Blackened by no hopeful flame

  Pay for your coffee, shed dust, then leave,

  This is her wide domain.

  Blessed Be

  1. Blessed be

  all smudge, lag and excrement found in me.

  I’m grateful should my small deposit

  of shed skin and tumour-worn cells

  achieve grace through anonymity;

  washed up as detritus grit,

  mingled among beach sand,

  toddlers’ shit

  and the bone-granules of dead sea life.

  2. Blessed be

  sea urchin, starfish, anemone.

  Glory to salt water that stung.

  Honour to pigface, praise to

  triumph of tidal residue,

  to all drift-scrap dashed by spray.

  All hail protean blue.

  Charmaine Papertalk-Green (b.1962)

  Don’t Want Me to Talk

  You don’t want me to talk about

  Mining or its impact on country

  You don’t want me to talk about

  The concept and construct of ‘whiteness’

  And how dominant and real it is

  You don’t want me to talk about

  The art vultures here and everywhere

  Modern day art missionaries

  Guiding us on the great white canvas

  You don’t want me to talk about

  Treaties or invasion of this land

  It’s a shared true history — let’s heal

  You don’t want me to talk about

  Past injustices, cultural cruelty, cultural genocide

  It’s a shared true history — let us heal

  You don’t want me to talk about

  How reconciliation could be the wrong word

  You don’t want me to talk about

  Native titles way of moving across

  The Midwest and Murchison landscape

  You don’t want me to talk at all

  Most of the time

  You want me to nod, smile and listen

  You don’t want me to talk about

  How I have got a voice

  And you don’t listen.

  A White Australia Mindset

  When do you know it has become obsolete?

  When can we be certain it has become obsolete?

  Take the White Australian Policy abolished on paper yet

  The mindset was to keep Australia for the descendants

  Of the British and to keep ‘Asians’ and ‘coloureds’ out

  Prime Ministers applauded making farmers feel safe

  With the stolen lands taken from the First People’s

  Australia’s foundation proudly cemented

  As the land of the long white nation

  A mindset transferred from father to son

  Ensuring it survives down the line thru time.

  A White Australia mindset is not out of date

  Policies, Legislations, attitudes, stereotypes

  A voice screaming ‘go back where you belong’

  A voice asserting ‘Hey mate whites built this country’

  A voice declaring ‘this was nothing before we came’

  The White Australian mindset not replaced

  Not obsolete, not out of date, not disappeared

  Strong Wajarri Man

  His skin is fair — no argument there

  Lived as a Yamaji all his life

  As a strong Wajarri man

  That is his world that is his clan

  Though he was raised in town

  This family know their connections

  To kin, place, ‘country’ all around

  His skin is fair — no argument there

  His old people’s sweat and tears

  Dropped into Wajarri land

  His old people’s feet

  Stirred Wajarri dust and sand

  Their bones now rest

  On Murchison stations out there

  And they say ‘no’ to him

  For Wajarri land he can’t care

  Cause he not related to them

  That type of reason is up in the air

  His skin is fair — no argument

  He is heading to 70 a winjar now

  He knows his barna and clan

  For he is a strong

  Wajarri man

  ‘winja’: Wajarri word for ‘old’

  ‘barna’: Wajarri word for ‘land’

  Blinding Loyalty

  The Yamaji didn’t see it coming

  Having taken over from their fathers

  Working as farm hands Mullewa side

  The seasonal work welcomed

  Getting to drive the equipment

  Preparing the land for wheat

  Driving in circles and squares

  Late at night and into early mornings

  The extra dollars needed

  These Yamaji didn’t see it coming

  Over the years the equipment

  Became flasher — more buttons

  Control panels computerised

  Farmers wanting more from the land

  This was their priority — more, more, more

  Local seasonal farm hands could be replaced

  In fact they would be replaced — no
loyalty there

  Not even a thought to train them

  Just bring in outsiders to operate

  Expensive equipment now

  The Yamaji couldn’t see it coming

  His need for work made him blind

  The opportunities not great inland

  His loyalty to his father’s loyalty to the farmer

  Made him blind to the fact

  That he was no longer needed

  Sarah French (b.1963)

  Boy

  for my father

  He was here yesterday

  standing in front of the backdrop of an old army blanket

  dressed as the princess in Aladdin

  the sticky pink of his dress

  had to be colourized in the photo

  his face a pale blank

  he had to sing a duet with Aladdin

  a dream in duck egg blue satin

  face as perfect a circle

  as a compass ever drew, smile

  strung like a hammock from ear to ear

  they had sing a duet

  If you were the only girl in the world

  & I were the only boy

  at the Royal Albert Orphanage

  the boy who kept himself a secret

  guarded by silence all his life

  had to open his throat & hope

  that he could follow his voice,

  like an Indian rope trick — up into the rafters

  & tickle those thick ribs of wood, that given enough force

  his falsetto could shatter

  the small square window that let in the moon.

  Kevin Gillam (b.1963)

  the furniture of thought

  I walk through the dimness of our childhood rooms

  and I touch nothing. I walk and I’m nine and

  in bed watching the model Spitfire climb then

  spiral earthward. I walk and the smell of the rug

  in the sleepout takes me to days of rain and

  plastic soldiers, nights when louvres slivered the

  mopoke’s call. I walk, shifting only the furniture

  of thought, and as I walk, in the folds of

  Art Deco and American Bungalow and late afternoon

  silence, there is plainchant, a thin vein of notes

  as if someone has fused blood and music, Latin text

  that sews and spells me. and these notes are father

  in falsetto, these notes us, family, our Dorian joy,

  major sixth intentions, flat seventh acceptance,

  never medicine but a muted room, these notes are from

  the fifth of us that went into that room,

  stayed behind, sat still and let the loud world

  pass by, then rose and left to walk into the sea

  John Kinsella (b.1963)

  Playing Cricket at Wheatlands

  An on-drive to the boundary the ball

  going on and on through dust and dirt

  on and on past the shed all the way past

  the chook pen and on bouncing over

  bark flaked and fallen from wandoos

  and on over dried twigs and branches

  and chunks of quartz — rose, milky —

  on and on under the loosely strung fence

  on and on over the dry ploughed ground

  of the ‘new’ pig yard on and on uphill

  gathering speed against gravity perpetual

  motion itself on and on over firebreaks

  past pig melons the only green hugging

  the ground in mid autumn still hot

  and the blond sheen of old stubble

  though behind the wicket some deeply

  ploughed paddocks where brief rain

  inspired prematurely and beyond

  them the mysterious Needlings Hills

  with granites and roos and markings

  telling stories of country deeper

  than survey pegs but back to the ball

  which rolls on and on right over

  contour banks at a tangent to the house-

  dam with its velvet-rippled-baked-

  mud walls and murky shallow eye

  courtesy of those brief rains and on

  up into the Top Bush where nest-robbers

  inspired anger and bewilderment and

  a children’s story starring all of us —

  especially my cousin Ian (wicket-keeping)

  and cousin Ken (first slip) caught ready

  to take the catch when I surprised them all

  by driving the ball a bit on the up but still

  on and on past the demon bowler

  who was probably my brother Stephen

  or my uncle Gerry — on and on scattering

  a flock of pink & greys scrounging

  for seed on and on past a pair of crows

  eyeing off the body parts of small creatures

  we can’t or won’t see and on and on

  into the distant purple mountain

  and through the setting sun and on

  into night that will fall over all

  our games fall on and beyond

  the farm our field of play.

  Goat

  Goat gone feral comes in where the fence is open

  comes in and makes hay and nips the tree seedlings

  and climbs the granite and bleats, through its line-

  through-the-bubble-of-a-spirit-level eyes it tracks

  our progress and bleats again. Its Boer heritage

  is scripted in its brown head, floppy basset-hound ears,

  and wind-tunnelled horns, curved back for swiftness.

  Boer goats merged prosaically into the feral population

  to increase carcass quality. To make wild meat. Purity

  cult of culling made vastly more profitable. It’s a narrative.

  Goat has one hoof missing — just a stump where it kicks

  and scratches its chin, back left leg hobbling, counter-

  balanced on rocks. Clots of hair hang like extra legs

  off its flanks. It is beast to those who’d make devil

  out of it, conjure it as Pan in the frolicking growth

  of the rural, an easer of their psyches when drink

  and blood flow in their mouths. To us, it is Goat

  who deserves to live and its ‘wanton destruction’

  the ranger cites as reason for shooting on sight

  looks laughable as new houses go up, as dozers

  push through the bush, as goats in their pens

  bred for fibre and milk and meat nibble forage

  down to the roots. Goat can live and we don’t know

  its whereabouts. It can live outside nationalist tropes.

  Its hobble is powerful as it mounts the outcrop

  and peers down the hill. Pathetic not to know

  that it thinks as hard as we do, that it can loathe

  and empathize. Goat tells me so. I am being literal.

  It speaks to me and I am learning to hear it speak.

  It knows where to find water when there’s no water

  to be found — it has learned to read the land

  in its own lifetime and will breed and pass its learning

  on and on if it can. Goat comes down and watches

  us over its shoulder, shits on the wall of the rainwater

  tank — our lifeline — and hobbles off

  to where it prays, where it makes art.

  Nandi Chinna (b.1964)

  Hydrology

  Only the wading birds remember

  the hydrology of the oval.

  We walk our dogs, kick soccer balls,

  practise golf swings across this low-lying place

  where dawn mist still seeks to connect and transpire.

  The lake is pressed beneath

  night soil, fish bones, offal,

  glass and metal, all our temporality.

  Underground the tide retreats to the west.

  The oval is mow
n and fertilised.

  Bore holes spit rusty mnemonics

  early on summer mornings

  when the ibis return to probe this dampland

  with their sharp beaks.

  Mags Webster (b.1964)

  Nights in Suburbia

  Nights like these are green, they wash me in citrus,

  sky dense as baize, unreadable, like your face

  and the moon, a crescent of lemon, fizzing

  in my glass. You say something about space,

  I gag on inadequacies, they stick

  to the roof of my mouth, take me once more

  to my knees. I breathe pixilated air, become

  crepuscular, a dust mote in a neon beam,

  slowly sinking. The city is lit up like

  a circuit board, it’s neutralised the stars, so there

  is nothing left to look up to. Sound swabs

  the silence between us, dogs hurl

  their longing through locked gates, frogs

  chafe the air; there is nothing more

  night can offer than the promise of morning —

  so ruthless, the way it happens again, again.

  Morgan Yasbincek (b.1964)

  the reindeer

  carves a path over the snow, antennae raking

  the sky, dialling time backwards, tracking north

  the girl on his back watches snow crystallise

  on the conifers

  she is searching for a boy who has glass in his

  eye, whose blood is thickening with cold

  she knows for him there are no more seasons, only

  ice ages in which she, all mortal, must dissolve

  yet still she is carried over a huge mammalian

  heart and if this muscular certainty can transport her

  there is direction

  snow sighs under hooves, shoulders pump

  a light sweat onto the fur of his neck, as they step, breath by

  breath, into a final migration

  with my sister at the funeral parlor

  with its carpet ticked in pink and beige,

  hotel furniture, it could be a foyer, but for

  our mother lying on the table

  her torso prepped in white plastic, the underside

  of her jaw heavily stitched from the autopsy

  her hands borrow our warmth, there is

  some talk, as we study her body for the last time;

  the irregular bulges on her knuckles from

  arthritis, her school-girl calves, the toenails we dreaded

 

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