The Even More Complete Book of Australian Verse

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The Even More Complete Book of Australian Verse Page 7

by John Clarke

Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  I’m as radical as a chocolate frog

  Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  You’ve got to do as you’re told by someone

  And it might as well be me

  The Mississippi moon comes up the window of the train

  Making good time down to Frisco in the early morning rain

  I can’t get me no interest rates, Oh Lord, I can’t, oh no

  I can’t get me no short term market, Oh Lord, I can’t, no mo’

  Ain’t no one prepared to pay twenty, Great Jesus, you tell me

  Please tell me how’s a workin man spose to live

  Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  I’m as radical as a chocolate frog

  Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  You’ve got to do as you’re told by someone

  And it might as well be me

  We got a call at work today from some guy on the road,

  Crosses shifted, any distance, family business, nothing down,

  Smart kid wanted with own transport, who must know at least

  Three ways of getting out to Calvary from town,

  And a man with bleeding feet came in to shelter from the storm,

  And he said he’d take it right away but he wanted Mondays off

  Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  I’m as radical as a chocolate frog

  Give me that old time religion

  That old time religion

  Give me that old time religion

  You’ve got to do as you’re told by someone

  And it might as well be me

  Leonard Con

  A deeply sensitive and wickedly humorous writer whose use of irony is greatly admired by very small children.

  THE EMPEROR'S NEW ALBUM

  I want you but I don’t deserve you

  My soul is not healthy or clean

  For a moose with undisciplined trousers

  Is slightly less smart than it seems

  But you'd like my friend, his name’s Jesus

  He’s tall and he’s handsome and cool

  He’s especially relaxed among lepers

  He’s the grooviest kid in the school

  I awake from a dream that I’m sleeping

  In the soft magazine of your hair

  It’s warm and it’s dark and it’s raining

  And I’m coming to Scarborough Fair

  There’s a man on the TV who’s standing

  On a mountain of glasses and shoes

  They’ve ambushed the train from Vienna

  On the six and a half o’clock news

  There are ten thousand Aryan women

  In position and firing at will

  I’ll take the ones in the tower

  And Jesus the fools on the hill

  And we synchronise watches and guide books

  And our weapons, false papers and charts

  General Mills on deployment of symbols

  General Boon on the breaking of hearts

  Then I’ll send in my troops in their millions

  I’ve trained them to swim in the dark

  Resistance is futile, we’re poets,

  And we’ll touch your perfect bodies

  With our shlong

  La la la la la la la la

  La la la la la la la

  La la la la la la la la

  La la la la la la la

  Paul Dorkan

  Paul is one of the most successful poets writing today. His work includes ‘Some of My Favourite Women’ and ‘Aren’t I Clever?’, both of which are collected in his anthology Look! Over Here!

  SIGNIFICANT EVENTS

  Twenty years to the day after Edmund Hillary

  Conquered Mount Everest, Terry Peterson conquered

  Heather O’Dwyer

  Who was at the time,

  The highest woman in the world.

  Exactly fifty years after Einstein discovered relativity

  Mrs Glenys Simpson discovered that under the house

  Without the aid of time or space,

  And using only friction and an active imagination

  Her son Bevan had effected an increase in mass.

  In 1925 James Joyce left Dublin for Zurich, with Nora.

  In 1983 Suzie Daley left Brisbane for Melbourne with Barry,

  A man she’d met on a train, who had something to do with computers.

  ‘Don’t forget to write’ her mother had said, but unlike James she never really bothered.

  Eighteen years after the famous tied test between Australia and the West Indies,

  Nipper Dixon and his team ran exactly as far as the police,

  Although it has to be said the police covered the distance slightly faster.

  Onlookers said it was all very confused and they weren’t there

  And they didn’t know where they’d got the microwave ovens.

  Nearly four hundred years after William Shakespeare wrote to be or not to be in Hamlet

  Owen McKenzie wrote to be in the draw for a luxury unit on the Gold Coast.

  ‘You can’t win it if you’re not in it,’ vouchsafed Owen within the privacy of his own mind.

  Half a century after Wittgenstein had taken issue with himself and revised his entire position on language,

  A plumber in Orbost changed his mind about the nature of elbow joints and thereafter did them in plastic.

  Hamish Sweeney

  Hamish, who translated the Australian constitution into English, is the current undisputed world heavyweight champion.

  ST FRANCES AND THE BROLGAS

  In the big wet, in the north, where I grew up, they couldn’t keep me inside,

  The minute the new rhythm hit the roof and rain speared the red earth

  I was off outside, hub-deep on the bike and pulling focus in all directions

  As the dust changed partners and danced into mud, kaolin and silt.

  This is the way it has always been, in this territory of grace,

  And a few clicks up the road was my sister, not looking down,

  Where the sky was reflected, but away and up, head back on an angle,

  Her senses full of birds, corroborating and watchful.

  If they had met her, had been introduced, they would sit on her arms,

  Would drift down and have their young with confidence

  Along her sinew and among the soft strength of her,

  For she could hold no singers in higher regard

  Than those who had the knowing of the season,

  And below her, pressed in the flowing ground, her feet,

  Washed with the earth and helping her to the sky.

  Margaret Attwood

  Margaret comes from the bush up near Cooma and writes almost everything produced in Cooma. As well as her poetry she has produced a number of novels, mainly about Cooma.

  EVERYONE DANCES

  Look Janet look.

  See Janet run.

  Why is Janet running?

  More particularly why is she running from John?

  Can anyone think of a reason why she might be running towards Peter?

  How many people have spotted Janet’s mistake?

  Janet wants to be a nurse when she grows up.

  Janet wants to help people.

  Janet is a people person.

  Oliver wants to be a doctor and cure diseases.

  Oliver is too young to know what doctors really do.

  Oliver and Janet attain their majorities and meet at a party at Peter’s house.

  They fall in love over half a bott
le of wine and a Raoul Dufy

  print and they leave in Oliver’s powerful thrusting sports car.

  Oliver turns out to be a complete arsehole of course.

  How many of you noticed me setting him up?

  Janet runs into John at a Woody Allen movie and

  although John is almost as boring as the Woody Allen

  movie, he offers stability and reasonable genetic

  stock. They marry and Janet has two babies almost

  immediately.

  Janet loves her children but something is missing.

  After a time of wonder, she identifies the missing

  element as Peter. She meets Peter at a series of

  rendezvous so as not to alert Peter’s wife. This works

  well and John is not at all suspicious since he is not

  that sort of person. He is the sort of person who has

  been corking his secretary, the lissome Fiona, for

  nearly four years.

  Janet and Peter eventually find their affair becoming

  slightly less magical so they give it away and go back

  to civilian life. Peter makes a confession to his wife

  in which he pretends to recognise her value and blames

  himself in a manner which makes her feel responsible.

  Janet drinks like a fish and St John the Martyr feels

  justified in manipulating Fiona.

  Can we all see the people Janet helped?

  Can Janet see?

  Look Janet look.

  1 Although fragments have been found around Stratford near Horsham of a work beginning ‘Would there be any point in my drawing some sort of comparison between yourself and an absolute scorcher?’

  2 ‘Pommymandius’ can still be heard in pubs but no authentic manuscript exists.

  3 Stumpy Byron V.C. Best known for swimming at night across the shark-infested Dardanelles in order to light fires on unoccupied beaches and confuse the Turks. The Victoria Cross was awarded posthumously since Stumpy caught the flu and died a few weeks later.

  4 Brian Browning; poet and cricket-lover. Rumoured to have seen every Test match played in Australia between 1922 and 1939. Best known for the work beginning, ‘Oh to be in April now that England’s here’.

  Text classics

  For reading group notes visit textclassics.com.au

  The Commandant

  Jessica Anderson

  Introduced by Carmen Callil

  Homesickness

  Murray Bail

  Introduced by Peter Conrad

  Sydney Bridge Upside Down

  David Ballantyne

  Introduced by Kate De Goldi

  A Difficult Young Man

  Martin Boyd

  Introduced by Sonya Hartnett

  The Australian Ugliness

  Robin Boyd

  Introduced by Christos Tsiolkas

  The Even More Complete

  Book of Australian Verse

  John Clarke

  Introduced by John Clarke

  Diary of a Bad Year

  JM Coetzee

  Introduced by Peter Goldsworthy

  Wake in Fright

  Kenneth Cook

  Introduced by Peter Temple

  The Dying Trade

  Peter Corris

  Introduced by Charles Waterstreet

  They’re a Weird Mob

  Nino Culotta

  Introduced by Jacinta Tynan

  Careful, He Might Hear You

  Sumner Locke Elliott

  Introduced by Robyn Nevin

  Terra Australis

  Matthew Flinders

  Introduced by Tim Flannery

  My Brilliant Career

  Miles Franklin

  Introduced by Jennifer Byrne

  Cosmo Cosmolino

  Helen Garner

  Introduced by Ramona Koval

  Dark Places

  Kate Grenville

  Introduced by Louise Adler

  The Watch Tower

  Elizabeth Harrower

  Introduced by Joan London

  The Mystery of

  a Hansom Cab

  Fergus Hume

  Introduced by Simon Caterson

  The Glass Canoe

  David Ireland

  Introduced by Nicolas Rothwell

  The Jerilderie Letter

  Ned Kelly

  Introduced by Alex McDermott

  Bring Larks and Heroes

  Thomas Keneally

  Introduced by Geordie Williamson

  Strine

  Afferbeck Lauder

  Introduced by John Clarke

  Stiff

  Shane Maloney

  Introduced by Lindsay Tanner

  The Middle Parts of Fortune

  Frederic Manning

  Introduced by Simon Caterson

  The Scarecrow

  Ronald Hugh Morrieson

  Introduced by Craig Sherborne

  The Dig Tree

  Sarah Murgatroyd

  Introduced by Geoffrey Blainey

  The Plains

  Gerald Murnane

  Introduced by Wayne Macauley

  The Fortunes of

  Richard Mahony

  Henry Handel Richardson

  Introduced by Peter Craven

  The Women in Black

  Madeleine St John

  Introduced by Bruce Beresford

  An Iron Rose

  Peter Temple

  Introduced by Les Carlyon

  1788

  Watkin Tench

  Introduced by Tim Flannery

 

 

 


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