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Collected Poems

Page 39

by Les Murray


  Could I ever rejoice!

  It’s war, alas – and unbearable pain

  If any think it my choice!

  AUSTRALIAN LOVE POEM

  FOR JENNIFER STRAUSS

  A primary teacher taking courses,

  he loved the little girls,

  never hard enough to be sacked:

  parents made him change schools.

  When sure this was his life sentence,

  he dropped studies for routine:

  the job, the Turf papers, beer,

  the then-new poker machine.

  Always urbane, he boarded happily

  among show-jump ribbons, nailed towels,

  stockwhip attitudes he’d find reasons for

  and a paddock view, with fowls.

  Because the old days weren’t connected

  the boss wouldn’t have the phone.

  The wife loved cards, outings, Danny Boy,

  sweet malice in a mourning tone.

  Life had set his hosts aside, as a couple,

  from verve or parenthood.

  How they lived as a threesome enlivened them

  and need not be understood.

  Euchre hands that brushed away the decades

  also fanned rumour

  and mothers of daughters banned the teacher

  in his raceday humour,

  but snap brim feigning awe of fat-cattle brim

  and the henna rinse between them

  enlarged each of the three to the others, till

  the boss fell on his farm.

  Alone together then, beyond the talk,

  he’d cook, and tint, and curl,

  and sit voluble through rare family visits

  to his aged little girl.

  As she got lost in the years

  where she would wander,

  her boy would hold her in bed

  and wash sheets to spread under.

  But when her relations carried her,

  murmuring, out to their van,

  he fled that day, as one with no rights,

  as an unthanked old man.

  INSIDE AYERS ROCK

  Inside Ayers Rock is lit

  with paired fluorescent lights

  on steel pillars supporting the ceiling

  of haze-blue marquee cloth

  high above the non-slip pavers.

  Curving around the cafeteria

  throughout vast inner space

  is a Milky Way of plastic chairs

  in foursomes around tables

  all the way to the truck drivers’ enclave.

  Dusted coolabah trees grow to the ceiling,

  TVs talk in gassy colours, and

  round the walls are Outback shop fronts:

  the Beehive Bookshop for brochures,

  Casual Clobber, the bottled Country Kitchen

  and the sheet-iron Dreamtime Experience

  that is turned off at night.

  A high bank of medal-ribbony

  lolly jars presides over

  island counters like opened crates,

  one labelled White Mugs, and covered with them.

  A two-dimensional policeman

  discourages shoplifting of gifts

  and near the entrance, where you pay

  for fuel, there stands a tribal man

  in rib-paint and pubic tassel.

  It is all gentle and kind.

  In beyond the children’s playworld

  there are fossils, like crumpled

  old drawings of creatures in rock.

  EACH MORNING ONCE MORE SEAMLESS

  Mother and type of evolution,

  the New Testament of the scholars

  may be likened to a library catalogue

  of the old type, a card index console

  of wooden drawers, each a verse.

  And you never know which ones are out,

  stacked up, spilt, or currently back

  in, with some words deleted

  then restored. And it never ends.

  Reputations slide them out,

  convictions push them in.

  Speculations look backwards once

  and stiffen to salt-crystal proofs.

  Dates grow on palms in the wilderness

  and ferment in human minds –

  and criticism’s prison for all poems

  was modelled on this traffic.

  Most battered of all are the drawers

  labelled Resurrection, The.

  Bashed, switched, themselves resurrected

  continually. Because it is impossible,

  as the galaxies were, as life was,

  as flight and language were. The impossible,

  evolution’s prey, shot with Time’s arrow.

  But this one is the bow of time.

  Shadowy at a little distance tower

  other banks of card-index drawers,

  other myriad shelves, jammed with human names.

  Some labelled in German are most actively

  worked over, grieved, and reinserted.

  More stretch away in Eastern scripts,

  scarcely visited. Dust softens their headwords.

  Yet the only moral reason to leave any

  in silence fragments and reassembles

  in the swarmed over, nagged, fantasised

  word-atoms of the critics’ testament.

  CONTESTED LANDSCAPE AT FORSAYTH

  The conquest of fire-culture

  on that timber countryside

  has broadcast innumerable

  termite mounds all through

  the gravel gold rush hills

  and the remnant railhead town,

  petrified French mustards

  out of jars long smashed.

  Train platform and tin Shire

  are beleaguered in nameless cemetery.

  Outworks of the Dividing range

  are annulled under Dreaming-turds.

  It’s as if every place a miner

  cursed, or thought of sex,

  had its abraded marker. Mile

  on mile of freckled shade,

  the ordinary is riddled by

  cylinder-pins of unheard music.

  On depopulated country

  frail billions are alive

  in layered earthen lace.

  Their every flight is

  a generation, glueing towers

  which scatter and mass

  on a blind smell-plan.

  Cobras and meta-cobras

  in the bush, immense black vines

  await monsoon in a world

  of clay lingam altars.

  Like the monuments to every

  mortal thing that a planet without God

  would require, and inscriptionless

  as rage would soon weather those,

  the anthills erupt on verges,

  on streets, round the glaring pub,

  its mango trees and sleeping-fridges,

  an estuary of undergrounds,

  dried cities of the flying worm.

  THE SHIELD-SCALES OF HERALDRY

  Surmounting my government’s high evasions

  stands a barbecue of crosses and birds

  tended by a kangaroo and emu

  but in our courts, above the judge,

  a lion and a unicorn still keep

  their smaller offspring, plus a harp,

  in an open prison looped with mottoes.

  Coats of arms, plaster Rorschach blots,

  crowned stone moths, they encrust Europe.

  As God was dismissed from churches

  they fluttered in and cling to the walls,

  abstract comic-pages held by scrolled beasts,

  or wear on the flagstones underfoot.

  They pertain to an earlier Antichrist,

  the one before police. Mafiose citadels

  made them, states of one attended family

  islanded in furrows. The oldest

  are the simplest. A cross, some coins,

&nbs
p; a stripe, a roof tree, a spur rowel,

  bowstaves, a hollow-gutted lion,

  and all in lucid target colours.

  Under tinned heads with reveries tied on,

  shields are quartered and cubed by marriage

  till they are sacred campaign maps

  or anatomy inside dissected mantling,

  glyphs minutely clear through their one

  rule, that colour must abut either

  gold or silver, the non-weapon metals.

  The New World doesn’t blazon well –

  the new world ran away from blazonry

  or was sent away in chains by it –

  but exceptions shine: the spread eagle

  with the fireworks display on its belly

  and in the thinks-balloon above its head.

  And when as a half-autistic

  kid in scrub paddocks vert and or

  I grooved on the cloisons of pedigree

  it was a vivid writing of system

  that hypnotised me, beyond the obvious

  euphemism of force. It was eight hundred

  years of cubist art and Europe’s dreamings:

  the Cup, the Rose, the Ship, the Antlers.

  High courage, bestial snobbery,

  neither now merits ungrace from us.

  They could no longer hang me,

  throttling, for a rabbit sejant.

  Like everyone, I would now be lord

  or lady myself, and pardon me

  or myself loose the coronet-necked hounds.

  THE YEAR OF THE KILN PORTRAITS

  I came in from planting more trees.

  I was sweating, and flopped down aslant

  on the sofa. You and Clare were sitting

  at the lunch table, singing as you do

  in harmony even I hear as beautiful,

  mezzo soprano and soprano,

  for anything Arno. You winked at me

  and, liquescent as my face was,

  I must have looked like the year

  you painted all our portraits, lovingly,

  exquisitely, on ceramic tiles

  in undrying oil, just one

  or at most two colours at a time

  and carried them braced oblique, wet,

  in plastic ice-cream boxes to town.

  It was encaustic painting,

  ancient Rome’s photography, that gets

  developed in successive kiln firings

  till it lives, time-freed, transposed

  in behind a once-blank glaze.

  Afterwards, you did some figured tiles

  for our patchwork chimney, then stopped.

  In art, you have serious gifts. But it’s

  crazy: you’re not driven. Not obsessive.

  UNDER THE BANANA MOUNTAINS

  At the edge of the tropics

  they cut on the hills

  raw shapes of other hills

  and colour them banana.

  One I used to see towering

  each time I came away

  climbed up and up, dressed in

  a banana-tree beach shirt

  with bush round its shoulders

  like thrown-back jersey sleeves

  and the rimmed sea below

  drawing real estate to it.

  Two islands were named Solitary

  and the town wharf was crumbling

  but surfers climbed sea-faces

  on their boards, hand over hand.

  The perched banana farms

  mounted thousandfold stands

  of room-long Chinese banners

  or green to yellow lash-ups

  of quill pens, splitting-edged,

  their ink points in scrap vellum

  each time I came away,

  shiplapped fruit in blue mantles

  all gaslit by the sun

  and men drove tractors sidelong

  like fighter planes, round steeps

  worse than killed Grace Kelly.

  Their scale came down to us

  or caught round high-set houses.

  I had shining hospitality

  in dimmed subtropic rooms,

  I unveiled a pastel school

  and swift days keep passing

  since I came away.

  A STAGE IN GENTRIFICATION

  Most Culture has been an East German plastic bag

  pulled over our heads, stifling and wet,

  we see a hotly distorted world

  through crackling folds and try not to gag.

  Sex, media careers, the Australian republic

  and recruited depression are in that bag

  with scorn of God, with self-abasement studies

  and funding’s addictive smelling-rag.

  Eighty million were murdered by police

  in the selfsame terms and spirit which nag

  and bully and set the atmosphere

  inside the East German plastic bag.

  It wants to become our country’s flag

  and rule by demo and kangaroo court

  but it’s wearing thin. It’ll spill, and twist

  and fly off still rustling Fascist! Fascist!

  and catch on the same fence as Hitler, and sag.

  EARTH TREMOR AT NIGHT

  Stopped by an earthquake on the North Coast line

  in moonless dark, and thrumming, between Mount George

  and Charity Creek, passengers become neighbours, worry,

  peer out through mirrored selves. Opened doors reveal

  steep winter canebrakes and the wide skinned scent

  of the upper Manning River in a time of drought.

  At the train’s lit head, talk clangs like obscure tools.

  Away over past a window is Kimbriki,* tribal estate

  of one dignified slim old man and the farm of another,

  my great great grandfather. Both occupied the same land

  amicably. Smoke rose beside separate bark roofings.

  In the next generation, no tribal heir appeared.

  What you presume concerning this will tell you

  the trend of your life. The sky is bumper with stars:

  each like a snowflake, if seen through reading glasses.

  The crew still knocking out words up along the train,

  the people beg for radios, telephones. It’s an earthquake!

  Miles out to the south my family already has news

  but here we’re baulked of action. All dark hills, no road.

  Alarm is like childhood, when love was from before thinking.

  Beyond choice, we see our loves as indigenes see land.

  * Kimbriki: pronounced KIM-brik-ai

  WAKING UP ON TOUR

  Almost surprised to have been

  delivered to the same house

  as I went to sleep in, I unglue

  my mouth, and flap back the bedclothes.

  Brickwork is dawning, and pooled streets

  which are floors of that red sea.

  Time enough, for descending stair-depths

  on a smile, dispelling hosts’ privacy.

  The salmon were scabbard and blade

  in the delis of Ireland;

  mist formed like manna on dusk fields.

  Glassed prison cells jutted singly

  there, nuclei filled with soldiers

  inside cubed membranes of mesh.

  Wales was reached across tuned

  high strings, and the proud black red cream

  towns of England go orange at nightfall,

  still being rammed by lorries,

  all those cities that exiled and hanged

  the present, when it was their future.

  TYMPAN ALLEY

  Adult songs in English,

  avoiding schmaltz,

  pre-twang:

  the last songs adults sang.

  When roles and manners wore

  their cuffs as shot as Or-

  tega y Gasset’s,

  soloists sang

  as if
a jeweller raised

  pinches of facets

  for hearts as yet unfazed

  by fatty assets.

  Adult songs with English;

  the brilliantine long-play

  records of the day

  sing of the singlish,

  the arch from wry to rue,

  of marques and just one Engel,

  blue, that Dietrich played;

  euphemism’s last parade

  with rhymes still on our side

  unwilling to divide

  the men from the poise,

  of lackadays and lakatois –

  and always you,

  cool independent You,

  unsnowable, au fait,

  when Us were hotly two,

  not lost in They.

  A LEGO OF DRIVING TO SYDNEY

  Dousing the campfire with tea

  you step on the pedal and mount

  whip-high behind splashboard and socket.

  Your burnished rims tilt and rebound

  among bristling botany. Only

  a day now to the Port,

  to bodices in the coffee palace,

  to metal-shying razors in suits

  and bare ships towing out, to dress

  and concentrate in the wind.

  Motoring down the main roads,

  fenced wheeltrack-choices in forest,

  odd scored beds of gravel,

  knotwood in the ground –

  you will have to wrestle

  hand and foot to reach Sydney

  and win every fall.

  River punts are respites.

  Croak-oak! the horsedung roads

  aren’t scented any more, but tasted.

  Paved road starts at Chatswood:

  just one ferry then, to stringing

  tramcars and curl the mo,

  to palms in the wonderful hotels.

  Blazing down a razorback

  in slab dark, in a huge

  American car of the chassis age

  to rescue for pleated cushions

  a staring loved one who’ll sway

  down every totter of the gangway

  on cane legs. Petrol coupons

  had to be scrounged for this one:

  they have seen too much railway.

  Queuing down bloody highways

  all round Easter, crawling in

  to the great herbed sandstone bowl

  of tealeaf scrub and suburbs,

  hills by Monier and Wunderlich

  in kiln orange, with cracks of harbour,

  coming down to miss the milking

  on full board, with baked Sundays,

  life now to be neat and dry eyed,

  coming down to be gentrified.

 

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