Collected Poems

Home > Other > Collected Poems > Page 56
Collected Poems Page 56

by Les Murray


  Independence? But you’re your own Scot.

  The job of Australian icon?

  Well yes. Black flies in the buggy.

  Bush pianos. The cheek-sawing wimple

  in summer: you did do local penance.

  Your vow to “educate poor children” –

  might you now say “to heal

  the education of poor children?”

  Who says a woman can’t rise

  in the Church? Mother Mary,

  awake in Heaven, pray for us.

  HIGH RISE

  Fawn high rise of Beijing

  with wristwatch-shaped

  air conditioners on each window

  and burglar bars to the tenth

  level in each new city,

  white-belted cylinders of dwelling

  around every Hong Kong bay –

  Latest theory is, the billions

  will slow their overbreeding

  only when consuming in the sky.

  Balconious kung fu of Shanghai.

  A nineteenth floor lover

  heroic among consumer goods

  slips off the heights of desire

  down the going-home high wire –

  above all the only children.

  NUCLEAR FAMILY BEES

  Little native-bee hives

  clotted all up the trunk

  of a big tree by the river.

  Not pumped from a common womb

  this world of honey-flies

  is a vertical black suburb

  of glued-on prism cells.

  Hunters stopping by

  would toe-walk up,

  scab off single wax houses

  and suck them out, as each

  smallholder couple hovered

  remonstrating in the air

  with their life to rebuild,

  new eggs, new sugarbag,

  gold skinfulls of water.

  WHEN TWO PERCENT WERE STUDENTS

  Gorgeous expansion of life

  all day at the university,

  then home to be late for meals,

  an impractical, unwanted boarder.

  When rush hours were so tough

  a heart attack might get stepped over

  you looked up from the long footpaths

  to partings in the houses’ iron hair.

  Hosts of Depression-time and wartime

  hated their failure, which was you.

  Widows with no facelift of joy

  spat their irons. Shamed by bookishness

  you puzzled their downcast sons

  who thought you might be a poofter,

  so you’d hitchhike home to run wild

  again where cows made vaccine

  and ancient cows discovered aspirin,

  up home, where your father and you

  still wore pink from the housework

  you taught each other years before –

  and those were the years when farm wives

  drove to the coast with milk hands

  to gut fish, because government no longer

  trusted poor voters on poor lands.

  I WROTE A LITTLE HAIKU

  I wrote a little haiku

  titled The Springfields:

  Lead drips out of

  a burning farm rail.

  Their Civil War.

  Critics didn’t like it,

  said it was obscure –

  The title was the rifle

  both American sides bore,

  lead was its heavy bullet

  the Minié, which tore

  often wet with blood and sera

  into the farmyard timbers

  and forests of that era,

  wood that, burnt even now,

  might still re-melt and pour

  out runs of silvery ichor

  the size of wasted semen

  it had annulled before.

  DYNAMIC REST

  Six little terns

  feet gripping sand

  on a windy beach

  six more just above

  white with opened wings

  busy exchange of feet

  reaching down lifting off

  terns rising up through terns

  all quivering parallel

  drift ahead and settle

  bracing their eyes

  against the brunt of wind

  WEST COAST TOWNSHIP

  Cervantes. This one-strum pueblo

  seen beyond acorn banksia

  along a Benedictine surf –

  never the Oz end of a cable, though.

  How Spanish was the Indian Ocean?

  Well, not. Except for basque Sebastian

  de Elcano, centuries off Perth:

  Of mankind, only we in my ship shall

  have made a full circuit of Earth…

  even as scurvy kept their ebb low.

  MONEY AND THE FLYING HORSES

  Intriguing, the oaten seethe

  of thoroughbred horses in single stalls

  across a twilit cabin.

  Intimate, under the engines’ gale,

  a stamped hoof, a loose-lip sigh,

  like dawn sounds at track work.

  Pilots wearing the bat wings

  of intercontinental night cargo

  come out singly, to chat with or warn

  the company vet at his manifests:

  four to Dubai, ten from Shannon,

  Singapore, sixteen, sweating their nap.

  They breed in person, by our laws:

  halter-snibbed horses radiating over the world.

  Under half-human names, they run in person.

  We dress for them, in turn. Our officer class

  fought both of its world wars in riding tog:

  Luftwaffe and Wehrmacht in haunched jodhpur pants.

  Stumbling turbulence, and the animals

  skid, swivelling their large eyes

  but iron-fisted rear-outs calmed by revolver shot

  are a rarity now, six miles above

  the eventing cravat, the desert hawking dunes.

  Handlers move among the unroofed stalls.

  They’re settling down, Hank:

  easy to tell, with stallions;

  they must be the nudest creatures alive –

  Tomorrow, having flown from money to money

  this consignment will be trucked and rested

  then, on cobble, new hands will assume the familiar

  cripple-kneed buttock-up seat

  of eighteenth-century grooms

  still used by jockeys.

  SUN TAIKO

  Across the river

  outside of towns

  farm machinery for sale

  in wire compounds

  Pumpkin to all of it

  are rainwater tanks

  plastic, mostly round

  edge on, ribby flanks

  a few Roman IIIs

  most in cool Kiwi tones

  sage, battleship, dun

  two thousand litres, ten

  each with a rimmed

  O hole for sound

  PERSISTENCE OF THE REFORMATION

  Seen from the high cutting

  the sky drifts white cotton

  over dance-floors of water

  either side the shady creek

  that trickles down country

  lagoons gummed with water fern

  saucepans of wet money

  brass polyester gold

  couch grass black in swamp

  lily dams backed up gullies

  and parallel in paspalum

  old tillages that fed barns

  no one grows patch-crops now

  slow-walking black cattle

  circle up off cleared flats

  past pastel new brick houses

  and higher charcoal-barreled

  hills are fields of a war

  four hundred years of ship-spread

  jihad at first called

  the Thirty Years War

  buff coats and ship
s’ cannon

  the Christian civil war

  of worldwide estrangement

  freemasons, side massacres

  the nun-harem, Old Red Socks

  wives “turning” for husbands

  those forbidden their loves

  bitter chews of an old plug

  from Ireland and Britain

  while mutual help and space

  and breach of cliché and face

  here civilized the boundary fences

  bigot slurs jostled tempers

  right up into the dairy age

  new killings back

  in cold lanes of the Boyne

  shamed it all on the news

  among Christmas homecomings

  the local dead

  still mostly lie in ranks

  assigned them by denomination

  though belief may say Ask Mum

  and unpreached help

  has long been the message.

  CHILD LOGIC

  The smallest girl

  in the wild kid’s gang

  submitted her finger

  to his tomahawk idea –

  It hurt bad, dropping off.

  He knew he’d gone too far

  and ran, herding the others.

  Later on, he’d maim her brother.

  She stayed in the bush

  till sundown, wrote

  in blood on the logs, and

  gripped her gapped hand, afraid

  what her family would say

  to waste of a finger.

  Carelessness. Mad kids.

  She had done wrong some way.

  FLOODTIME NIGHT SHELTER

  No mattress for the last levee shoveller,

  estates of damp clothing rather

  and groceries and crises on the netball

  squeak floor, within sidelong of the river.

  Roped curtain to let underpants be shed,

  mulch of blankets half dry, and how

  to keep four cushions in line

  underback, with clay and shift-off

  as of islands in continental drift-off.

  Discreet knees up for sex or

  to check the infiltering depth of water

  far off houses colliding in main stream.

  These were many nights of that year.

  POWDER OF LIGHT

  Hunched in the farm ute

  tarpaulin against wind

  the moon chasing treetops

  as it yellows into night

  us, going to the pictures

  by the State forest way

  my mate’s brother driving

  we are at the age

  that has since slipped

  down toward toddlers

  for whom adults and dreams

  mostly have no names yet.

  What wagged on screen then

  made from powder of light

  were people in music

  who did and said dressy

  stuff in English or American

  kissed slow with faces crossed

  flicked small-to-big

  in an instant, then

  were back in Australia

  we believed it was Australia –

  then our driver who never

  attended films would surface

  from courting and collect us

  there way before TV.

  And people, some holding

  phones like face cards, still ask

  good movie? Who was in it?

  I smile and say Actors

  but rarely now add

  hired out of the air.

  THE BACKROAD COLLECTIONS

  Verandah shops with history

  up roads like dry-gully bends

  proffer gouts of laundered colour

  out into their gala weekends,

  recycled fashion displayed

  under bullnose eaves, down corridors,

  cerise, magenta, nubbled teal,

  lilac overalls that were a steal,

  yellow bordure and buttony rib,

  pouched swimsuits, cretonne ad lib

  in front of blush-crimson sleeves.

  Craft collectors carry off sheaves,

  tie dye, mai tai, taupe lingeries –

  and cattle who haven’t yet entered

  any building wander, contented,

  munching under their last trees

  till a blowsy gold-ginger horizon

  stacked up out of the day’s talk

  glorifies and buries the sun.

  A nude moon burns the newsprint version.

  TAP DOGS MUSIC

  Ponderous cauldrons

  roaring with air

  white gold slopping over

  smoke fallout everywhere

  Open the tap-hole

  steel light is blind

  intense as a searchlight

  infinitely confined

  The scorched hook-steerers

  down in the spatter

  spend crib times heel-and-toeing

  a new ferrous patter

  on sheets of cooled plate

  since these works will soon close

  and spangling metal

  will set in black floes.

  ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE

  A coffee cart was travelling down the mountain,

  in the yellow shape of an ice-cream coupe it travelled,

  a cappuccino on wheels.

  And we followed, speaking

  of this American teenager who was sent

  to remedial English, since he spoke more Tagalog.

  An American in remedial!

  His military parents had been deep

  in the Asian preoccupation. When he came back

  on a visit, it was in the splendid blues

  of their Marine Corps, wowing all the teachers.

  We recalled the Australian boy who comprehended

  nothing much, till his mother, called in to help,

  was heard talking fluently with him in a baby talk

  they had never abandoned. They were off a farm

  deeper in the mountains. A bit like the Georgian

  who sat in the back of his class for one whole year

  getting no English, substituting his fists for it

  till he was a State champ. Unlike the Hong Kong boy who

  returned to class with a slim briefcase and pinstripe

  having successfully saved a million of family

  investments in court before lunch time recess.

  They rise up from then, Widow and Camel Driver,

  now forty-fives and fifties, whom the teacher

  taught to prepare and cook their halal pilaff;

  they break-danced for her after midday prayers

  and spoke of a friend sniped with an ack-ack gun

  who vanished in red spray at his brother’s shoulder.

  It was a time of teenagers coaxed to go

  back to such boulevards. And of helicopters

  But!But!But! that sent boys scrambling

  into their chair tunnels.

  And we drove on down

  at just the speed which made our tyres buzz

  like the small wheels of a bed that would divide us.

  HIGH SPEED TRAP SPACE

  Speeding home from town

  in rainy dark. For the narrowness

  of main roads then, we were hurtling.

  A lorry on our tail, bouncing, lit our mirrors,

  twinned strawberries kept our lights down

  and our highway lane was walled

  in froth-barked trees. Nowhere to swerve –

  but out between trunks stepped an animal,

  big neck, muzzle and horns, calmly gazing

  at the play of speed on counter-speed.

  Its front hooves up, planted on the asphalt

  and our little room raced on to a beheading

  or else to be swallowed by the truck’s high bow.

  No dive down off my seat would get me low

  enough
to escape the crane-swing of that head

  and its imminence of butchery and glass.

  But it was gone.

  The monster jaw must have recoiled

  in one gulp to give me my survival.

  My brain was still full of the blubber lip,

  the dribbling cud. In all but reality

  the bomb stroke had still happened.

  Ghost glass and blurts of rain still showered

  out of my face at the man

  whose straining grip had had

  to refuse all swerving.

  DIABETICA

  A man coughs like a box

  and turns on yellow light

  to follow his bladder

  out over the gunwale

  of his bed. He yawns upright

  trying not to dot the floor

  with little advance pees.

  The clock on the night-stand

  biting off an hour he hates.

  Sugar, the sick caterer

  managed with unzipping needles

  Blood syrop, shortener of legs,

  ichor of the bishop

  whose name is on a school

  because he could not beget.

  Like many milk-blind scholars

  and farmers short of breath

  above billions in sweet graves.

  THE PRIVACY OF TYPEWRITERS

  I am an old book troglodyte

  one who composes on paper

  and types up the result

  as many times as need be.

  The computer scares me

  its crashes and codes

  its links with spies and gunshot

  its text that looks pre-published.

  I fear a carriage

  that doesn’t move or ding,

  no inky marching hammers

  leaping up and subsiding.

  I trust the spoor of botch,

  whiteouts where thought deepened,

  wise freedom from Spell Check,

  sheets to sell the National Library.

  I fear the lore

  of that baleful misstruck key

  that fills a whiskered screen

  with a writhe of child pornography

  and the doors booting open

  and the cops handcuffing me,

  to a gristlier video culture

  coralline in an ever colder sea.

  ALL OF HALF WAY

  I.M. SUE RIDLEY

  As I was going to Coleraine

  a man in Bewleys said to me

  I wouldn’t wear that green cap up there

  if I was you, and I snatched it off –

 

‹ Prev