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Collected Poems

Page 51

by Les Murray


  primed to judge, as it moves

  through an endless exhibition.

  *

  Half the reason for streets,

  they’re to walk in the buzz

  the sexes find vim in,

  pheromones for the septa

  of men and of women.

  *

  If my daddy isn’t gone

  and I smell his strength and care

  I won’t grow my secret hair

  till a few years later on

  on Tasmania. Down there.

  *

  When I was pregnant

  says your sister, my nose

  suddenly went acute:

  I smelled which jars and cartons

  were opened, rooms away,

  which neighbours were in oestrus,

  the approach of death in sweat.

  I smelt termites in house-framing

  all through a town, that mealy taint.

  It all became as terrible

  as completely true gossip

  would be. Then it faded,

  as if my baby had learned

  enough, and stopped its

  strange unhuman education.

  *

  A teaspoon upside down

  in your mouth, and chopping onions

  will bring no tears to your cheeks.

  The spoon need not be silver.

  *

  Draw the cork from the stoic age

  and the nose is beer and whisky.

  I’ll drink wine and call myself sensitive!

  was a jeer. And it could be risky.

  Wesleyans boiled wine for Communion;

  a necked paper bag was a tramp;

  one glass of sweet sherry at Christmas,

  one flagon for the fringe-dwellers’ camp.

  You rise to wine or you sink to it

  was always its Anglo bouquet.

  *

  When we marched against the government

  it would use its dispersant gas

  Skunk Hour. Wretched, lingering experience.

  When we marched on the neo-feudal

  top firms, they sprayed an addictive

  fine powder of a thousand hip names

  that was bliss in your nostrils, in your head.

  Just getting more erased our other causes

  and it was kept illegal, to be dear,

  and you could destroy yourself to buy it

  or beg with your hands through the mesh,

  self-selecting, as their chemists did say.

  *

  Mars having come nearest our planet

  the spacecraft Beagle Two went

  to probe and sniff and scan it

  for life’s irrefutable scent,

  the gas older than bowels: methane,

  strong marker of digestion from the start,

  life-soup-thane, amoeba-thane, tree-thane.

  Sensors would screen Ares’ bouquet

  for paleo- or present micro-fartlets,

  even one-in-a-trillion pico-partlets,

  so advanced is the state of the art.

  As Mars lit his match in high darkness

  Beagle Two was jetting his way.

  *

  In the lanes of Hautgout

  where foetor is rank

  Gog smites and Pong strikes

  black septums of iron

  to keep the low down.

  Ride through, nuzzle your pomander:

  Don’t bathe, I am come to Town:

  Far ahead, soaps are rising,

  bubble baths and midday soaps.

  Death to Phew, taps for Hoh!

  Cribs from your Cologne water.

  *

  Ylang ylang

  elan élan

  the nostril caves

  that breathe stars in

  and charm to Spring

  the air du temps

  tune wombs to sync

  turn brut men on

  Sir Right, so wrong –

  scent, women’s sense

  its hunters gone

  not its influence!

  nose does not close

  adieu sagesse

  FOR A CONVERT IN BOSTON

  You’ve just resigned from judging

  when trips to the night side of Venus

  out of terror of her day,

  and forgiveness of these, and concealment

  while still saying Venus has a night side

  have summoned the steel eagle-feathers

  of antique armour to lisp

  hotly through waxed rooms

  of a pretend perfection.

  But can you tell accused from victims?

  As the broken faces come out,

  aghast, through the pelting gauntlet,

  they are added to the poor

  and the night side of the poor.

  THE NEWCASTLE ROUNDS

  Tall sails went slack, so high did Nobbys stand

  so they felled him in the surf to choke on sand

  and convicts naked as legs in trousers

  tunnelled for coal way below the houses.

  Workers got wages and the Co-op Store,

  wearing bowler hats as they waltzed through the door.

  They danced in pumps and they struck with banners

  and they ran us up a city with spans and spanners.

  When Esssington Lewiss blew through his name

  steel ran in rivers, coke marched in flame.

  Wharfies handled wire rope bloody with jags

  and took their hands home in Gladstone bags.

  Then the town break-danced on earthquake feet

  and tottered on crutches down every street.

  We all sniffed coke back then, for pay,

  but the city came up stately when the smoke blew away.

  With horses up the valley and wines flowing down

  clinking their glasses as a health to the town

  freighters queued off the port at all times,

  from pub to art show became a social sway,

  the original people got a corner of a say

  and the ocean spoke to surfers in whitecap rhymes.

  THE HOUSE LEFT IN ENGLISH

  The house has stopped its desperate travelling.

  It won’t fly to New Orleans, or to Hungary again,

  though it counts, and swears, in Magyar.

  It is left in English with its life suspended,

  meals in the freezer, clothes on airy shelves,

  ski badges prickling a wall chart of the Alps.

  The house plays radio, its lights clock on and off

  but it won’t answer the phone, even in Swiss German.

  Since the second recession of helped steps

  the house quotes from its life and can’t explain:

  dress-cutter’s chalk. Melbourne Cup day 1950.

  Alphorn skullcaps. Wartime soy flour, with an onion!

  All earlier houses and times, in black and white

  are boxed by aged children visiting to dust this one

  on its leafy corner and still, for a while, in colour.

  YREGAMI

  A warm stocking caught among limbs

  evokes a country road

  and tufted poodles growing out

  on the paddocks sway like seared trunks.

  Sliced whitefish bony with wind

  and very high up recall an autumn day;

  arrows showering far below them at a town

  speed as flights of wires.

  Glazed bush ballads rhymed in concrete

  pose as modern office buildings

  and a sated crowd leaving a ground

  after a draw feels like a stage in love.

  This horse seated on a chamber pot

  swinging its head and forelock,

  you’d swear it was a drunk old man.

  UPRIGHT CLEAR ACROSS

  FOR KAY ALDEN

  It’s like when, every year, flooding

  in our river would be first to cut

/>   the two-lane Pacific Highway.

  We kids would pedal down barefoot

  to the long ripple of the causeway

  and wade, deep in freezing fawn energy,

  ahead of windscreens slashing rain.

  We were all innocent authority.

  The through traffic was mostly wise

  enough not to try our back roads

  so we’d draw the North Coast back together,

  its trips, its mercy dashes, its loads,

  slow-dancing up to our navel

  maybe with a whole train of followers.

  Each step was a stance, with the force

  coming all from one side between shores.

  Every landing brought us ten bobs and silver

  and a facing lot with a bag on their motor

  wanting us to prove again what we

  had just proved, that the causeway was there.

  We could have, but never did, lose our footing

  or tangle in a drowning fence

  from which wire might be cut for towing –

  and then bridges came, high level,

  and ant-logs sailed on beneath affluence.

  GHOST STORY

  Two cars, converging by chance

  follow the same near-empty roads

  into the city after midnight.

  Suburban miles and the streetlamps

  moon pearls, or at hot salute,

  the traffic lights all on green.

  Just before mobile phones

  this is. They turn the same corners

  all through the insider streets:

  twice the far-back lights shorten

  interval, but aren’t let overtake.

  An hour, now, since the mountains.

  The lead car does a sudden

  sideslip, and swerves to the kerb,

  at bay in a sleep avenue

  of steeping houses. The other

  slows past it, and itself turns

  in at that exact driveway.

  Open. Shut. Its driver climbs

  the front yard terraces, not looking.

  He keys the front door and goes in.

  Light for a while deep inside.

  The silhouetted sit, dimmed,

  for a quarter of an hour,

  then a shovelling of coral

  from furtive downhill treads

  till their motor starts starting.

  THE SHINING SLOPES AND PLANES

  Having tacked loose tin panels

  of the car shed together

  Peter the carpenter walks straight up

  the ladder, no hands,

  and buttons down lapels of the roof.

  Now his light weight is on the house

  overhead, and then he’s back down

  bearing long straps of a wiry green

  Alpine grass, root-woven, fine as fur

  that has grown in our metal rain gutters.

  Bird-seeded, or fetched by the wind

  it has had twenty years up there

  being nourished on cloud-dust, on washings

  of radiant iron, on nesting debris

  in which pinch-sized trees had also sprouted.

  Now it tangles on the ground. And the laundry

  drips jowls of coloured weight

  below one walking stucco stucco

  up and down overlaps, to fix

  the biplane houses of Australia.

  THE SUCCESSION

  A llama stood in Hannover, with a man

  collecting euros for its sustenance.

  The camelid had a warm gaze. Its profound

  wool was spun of the dry cloud of heaven.

  My fingers ached with cold in October.

  I had to fly on to Great Britain.

  There the climate spared them, and Guy Fawkes

  dotted on for weeks, pop, Somme and flare,

  as if the wars of tabloid against Crown

  were swelling up to a bitter day in Whitehall –

  but battle never burst out from under the horizon.

  Leaves and cock pheasants went dizzily to their fall:

  the birds often stuck like eyebrows to the road.

  They and grouse, shot, were four bob at the butchers

  long ago when we’d wintered at Culloden.

  Two and a scavenged swede, and we were fed.

  Back then we weren’t quite foreign, and the Dole

  called on us at home. Our own country’s hard welfare

  made this a prodigy to us, like reverse arrest!

  When the media are king, will only fear be civil?

  A STAMPEDE OF THE SACRIFICE

  ST VALENTINE’S DAY 1916

  Starting to realise, blaming sergeant majordom

  five thousand Light Horse recruits break camp

  unarmed, but in their strapping uniform.

  A raw division of infantry, augmenting hubbub

  joins their tramp into Liverpool, the Army suburb.

  It is ten months since the Gallipoli landing

  but chevrons or shoulders exhorting or commanding

  can’t restrain this khaki spasm.

  Yelling rather than intelligible, mobs fall

  on hotels and drink them, pump, keg and bottle.

  From rattling glass, men fill their blue canteens

  and, shouting endearments, surge to commandeer

  steam trains to the city. Frightened women

  crowd off, and hobble-run to hide in churches.

  Reports of the day don’t allow individuals speech

  as they rampage. But while all manhood can’t say

  converges in a braying roar, it maintains purchase.

  The strikers smash every foreign word on display:

  Belgium, Diesel, lingerie, Rassmussen –

  glass under hobnails, signs poxed of their enamel.

  All this has been deleted from the legend.

  MP whistles and an unrepeated fusillade

  are noises off. Hansom cabs bolt. But the riot

  starts collapsing from strain of too much meaning.

  Men not finding their murderer start sightseeing.

  A few who know they joined up lightly change

  clothes in unguarded shops. But they’re likely few.

  Most simply exhaust their range,

  put things down, and start returning.

  Slippage, plum jam, licked pencils of review.

  The newspapers of then are quickly warned to silence.

  Sentences re-emerge, not least through courts martial:

  a thousand get sent home, or sent to gaol,

  before the Trenches reconnect their ravenous cable.

  Many of those dismissed will invent new names

  and rejoin the shipped battalions urging forward

  where private disaster is bestially swapped by men.

  For fifty years, pubs will close at six against them.

  THE OFFSHORE ISLAND

  Terra cotta of old rock undergirds

  this mile of haze-green island

  whitening odd edges of the sea.

  It is unbrowsed by hoofed beasts

  and their dung has not been on it.

  Trees of the ice age have stayed rare

  though no more firesticks come out

  from the long smoky continent

  lying a canoe-struggle to the west.

  The knee-high bush is silvered canes,

  bracken, unburnt grasses, bitou.

  Miners came, and ate the mutton birds.

  Greeks camped out there in lean times

  fishing. Their Greek islands lived in town

  with their families. Now it’s National Park.

  The world shrinks as it fills.

  Outer niches revert to space, in which

  to settle is soon too something.

  AS NIGHT-DWELLING WINTER APPROACHES

  Tree shadows, longer now, lie

  across the roads all one way

  but water goes fluently switchback,
<
br />   swelling left, unbuttoning right

  over successive cement fords.

  Cattle walk their egrets around

  but other long-beaked pensive birds

  of the low damp places

  snatch off the ground, rise above

  stress of the plovers, and start flying

  north over the world to sing.

  THE HOAXIST

  Whatever sanctifies itself draws me.

  Whether I come by bus or Net,

  rage and fun are strapped around my body.

  I don’t kill civilians. I terrorise

  experts and their elites. I drink their bubbly,

  I wander among their principles

  then at a pull of my cord

  I implode. And laughter cascades in,

  flooding those who suddenly abhor me.

  The media, who are Columbine

  with their prom queens and jocks,

  unsheathe their public functions

  and prolong the drowning frenzy.

  (Strange that the owners should want to

  sell the Herald to the Baptist church).

  Sometimes my cord has to be pulled

  for me by others. Or I cut it off.

  A buried hoax can be a career, a literature –

  Ah Koepenick! Oh Malley! My Ossianic Celts

  brought us the Romantic Era,

  my Piltdowns can resurge as stars!

  BARKER UNCHAINED

  FOR IAN KEAST, TEACHER OF ENGLISH

  Around the hilly roads

  I thought of you delivering

  Western culture day by day

  into impassive mailboxes,

  tinny tip-front ones, milk cans,

  shot beer-fridges, hard stoic slots,

  sweet pairs entwined at the leg.

  Nothing of it was junk mail

  at the moment of receipt,

  though much would have short life;

  there’d be odd bright returns,

  though, and thank-you pumpkins.

  I see you on very back roads

  where tyres snore on gravel

  and your propellant dust

  catching up at every stop

  enrolls you in a khaki furore.

  But sling it all now. Park the van,

  return the mailbags to prison

  and post yourselves off to where

  you’re a man of your own letters.

  LIFESTYLE

  In the stacked cities

  they dance the Narrow Kitchen

  barista, barista!

  we go to wear black.

  barista, barista!

  will you cook in your kitchen?

 

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