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Collected Poems

Page 46

by Les Murray


  vertical nose inhale man

  but you evince none

  of the arts of cliché.

  Your gaze photographs

  the effect of his gaze and yours.

  If you had a name, we might

  imagine you strolling on

  into all your private pictures,

  the Sierra, the Range Rover,

  into time’s minute razors.

  Here, where you still are

  as you were then, briefly being

  the temper of a people,

  you don’t know when you’re kissed

  or when your burnished horse

  was brought, block by block,

  shuddering happily in the sun.

  CHANSON

  The sun tunes out stars

  when it shines the air blue

  but the stars burn all day

  and you’re in their view

  the star in your window

  among the bow sashes

  would itself be a beau

  with glitter and dashes

  he’d swim in through panes

  framed up like the turrets

  of old bombing planes

  he’d intrude on your merits

  as light on a diamond

  of VVS grade

  diamond’s tender to light

  brick and wool they are hard –

  he’s a daylight star though

  from far back in time and

  those vanish in sun-bleach

  so he’s all blast and reach

  in illimitable night

  he’d rather be a highlight

  the stars burn beyond day

  and you’re in their view

  THE LONG WET SEASON

  Poetry is apt to rise in you

  just when you’re on the brink

  of doing something important,

  trivially important, like flying

  across the world tomorrow –

  while here our paddock, waterlogged

  from features and supplements of rain

  smells to be making dark beer

  out of rock oils afloat round its grass.

  Paperbark trees sleep their lives here.

  One supports a flowering constrictor

  vine fit to muscle over a rainforest:

  that tree’s been allowed decades

  of half life, being all the vine found,

  and the ownerless local flock

  of geese, spooked by something, all

  glide off like Chinese pottery

  spoons, rotating gloved feet.

  Out of the sky, crackling and folding

  like a spread of the Australian

  a snowy egret arrives to spike water.

  Nature, getting around like word.

  AUTUMN CELLO

  Driving up to visit April

  who lives on the Tableland

  we were sorry for russet beef cattle

  deciduous on pasture hills.

  We’d had to shower off summer

  to climb to the Tableland

  where April would be breezily

  scuffing her yellow shoes.

  As we crossed the caramel river

  that is walled in nettle trees

  and drove up through black rainforest

  the moon was in our mind

  it being the dark of the moon

  all day, as we went up to April,

  the fat moon who saw it is children

  who bring death into the world

  and was exiled to the sky for it

  before there was any April

  to plant elm trees, or touch

  amber glasses with a spoon.

  Next night, the moon would rise

  asleep in his brilliant rim

  of cradle above bared trees

  and April, having forgotten

  she was once herself a moon

  would feed cognac-coloured rosin

  to her cello bow, and read us

  story-feeling without the stories

  and straight depth with no sides,

  all from her tilted quatrain

  of strings with its blunt prong

  in her Wilton rug on the Tableland.

  THE NEW HIEROGLYPHICS

  In the World language, sometimes called

  Airport Road, a thinks balloon with a gondola

  under it is a symbol for speculation.

  Thumbs down to ear and tongue:

  World can be written and read, even painted

  but not spoken. People use their own words.

  Latin letters are in it for names, for e.g.

  OK and H2SO4, for musical notes,

  but mostly it’s diagrams: skirt-figure, trousered figure

  have escaped their toilet doors. I (that is, saya,

  ego, watashi wa) am two eyes without pupils;

  those aren’t seen when you look out through them.

  You has both pupils, we has one, and one blank.

  Good is thumbs up, thumb and finger zipping lips

  is confidential. Evil is three-cornered snake eyes.

  The effort is always to make the symbols obvious:

  the bolt of electricity, winged stethoscope of course

  for flying doctor. Pram under fire? Soviet film industry.

  Pictographs also shouldn’t be too culture-bound:

  a heart circled and crossed out surely isn’t.

  For red, betel spit lost out to ace of diamonds.

  Black is the ace of spades. The king of spades

  reads Union boss, the two is feeble effort.

  If is the shorthand Libra sign, the scales.

  Spare literal pictures render most nouns and verbs

  and computers can draw them faster than Pharaoh’s scribes.

  A bordello prospectus is as explicit as the action,

  but everywhere there’s sunflower talk, i.e.

  metaphor, as we’ve seen. A figure riding a skyhook

  bearing food in one hand is the pictograph for grace,

  two animals in a book read Nature, two books

  inside an animal, instinct. Rice in bowl with chopsticks

  denotes food. Figure 1 lying prone equals other.

  Most emotions are mini-faces, and the speech

  balloon is ubiquitous. A bull inside one is dialect

  for placards inside one. Sun and moon together

  inside one is poetry. Sun and moon over palette,

  over shoes etc. are all art forms – but above

  a cracked heart and champagne glass? Riddle that

  and you’re starting to think in World, whose grammar

  is Chinese-terse and fluid. Who needs the square-

  equals-diamond book, the dictionary, to know figures

  led by strings to their genitals mean fashion?

  just as a skirt beneath a circle means demure

  or a similar circle shouldering two arrows is macho.

  All peoples are at times cat in water with this language

  but it does promote international bird on shoulder.

  This foretaste now lays its knife and fork parallel.

  ON THE BORDERS

  We’re driving across tableland

  somewhere in the world;

  it is almost bare of trees.

  Upland near void of features

  always moves me, but not to thought;

  it lets me rest from thinking.

  I feel no need to interpret it

  as if it were art. Too much

  of poetry is criticism now.

  That hawk, clinging to

  the eaves of the wind, beating

  its third wing, its tail

  isn’t mine to sell. And here is

  more like the space that needs

  to exist around an image.

  This cloud-roof country reminds me

  of the character of people

  who first encountered roses in soap.

  THE ANNALS OF SHEER

&n
bsp; Like a crack across a windscreen

  this Alpine sheep track winds

  around buttress cliffs of sheer

  no guard rail anywhere

  like cobweb round a coat

  it threads a bare rock world

  too steep for soil to cling,

  stark as poor people’s need.

  High plateau pasture must be great

  and coming this way to it

  or from it must save days

  for men to have inched across

  traverses, sometime since the ice age,

  and then with knock and hammer

  pitching reminders over-side

  wedged a pavement two sheep wide.

  In the international sign-code

  this would be my pictograph for

  cold horror, but generations

  have led their flocks down and up

  this flow-pipe where any spurt

  or check in deliberate walking

  could bring overspill and barrelling

  far down, to puffs of smash, to ruin

  which these men have had

  the calm skills, on re-frozen

  mist footing, to prevent

  since before hammers hit iron.

  ERNEST HEMINGWAY AND THE LATEST QUAKE

  In fact the Earth never stops moving.

  Northbound in our millimetric shoving

  we heap rainy Papua ahead of us

  with tremor and fumarole and shear

  but: no life without this under-ruckus.

  The armoured shell of Venus doesn’t move.

  She is trapped in her static of hell.

  The heat of her inner weight feeds enormous

  volcanoes in that gold atmosphere

  which her steam oceans boil above.

  Venus has never known love:

  that was a European error.

  Heat that would prevent us gets expressed

  as continent-tiles being stressed and rifted.

  These make Earth the planet for lovers.

  If coral edging under icy covers

  or, too evolutionary slow

  for human histories to observe it, a low

  coastline faulting up to be a tree-line

  blur landscape in rare jolts of travel

  that squash collapsing masonry with blood

  then frantic thousands pay for all of us.

  THE IMAGES ALONE

  Scarlet as the cloth draped over a sword,

  white as steaming rice, blue as leschenaultia,

  old curried towns, the frog in its green human skin;

  a ploughman walking his furrow as if in irons, but

  as at a whoop of young men running loose

  in brick passages, there occurred the thought

  like instant stitches all through crumpled silk:

  as if he’d had to leap to catch the bullet.

  A stench like hands out of the ground.

  The willows had like beads in their hair, and

  Peenemünde, grunted the dentist’s drill, Peenemünde!

  Fowls went on typing on every corn key, green

  kept crowding the pinks of peach trees into the sky

  but used speech balloons were tacky in the river

  and waterbirds had liftoff as at a repeal of gravity.

  ROOMS OF THE SKETCH-GARDEN

  FOR PETER AND CHRISTINE ALEXANDER

  Women made the gardens, in my world,

  cottage style full-sun fanfares

  netting-fenced, of tablecloth colours.

  Shade is what I first tried to grow

  one fence in from jealous pasture,

  shade, which cattle rogueing into

  or let into, could devour

  and not hurt much. Shelter from glare

  it rests their big eyes, and rests in them.

  A graphite-toned background of air

  it features red, focusses yellow.

  Blue diffusing through it rings the firebell.

  Shade makes colours loom and be thoughtful.

  It has the afterlife atmosphere

  but also the philosophic stone cool.

  It is both day and night civilised,

  the colour of reading, the tone

  of inside, and of inside the mind.

  I could call these four acres Hanlin

  for the Chinese things they have nourished,

  loquat, elm, mulberry, the hard pear

  er ben lai. But other names would fit: Klagenfurt,

  Moaner’s Crossing, for the many things that die,

  for worn-out farm soil, for the fruit fly.

  Cloud shadows walking our pencilled roof

  in summer sound like a feasting chook

  or Kukukuku on about duk-duk

  and this sketch garden’s a retina for chance:

  for floodwaters backing into the lower

  parterres like lorryloads of mercury

  at night, or level sepia by day,

  for the twenty-three sorts of native vines

  along the gully; for the heron-brought

  igniting propane-blue waterlily,

  for the white poplars’ underworld advance

  on the whole earth, out of my ignorance.

  Tall Australians stand east of the house

  and well north. The garden’s not nationalist:

  Australians burn, on winds from the west.

  No birds that skim-drink, or bow

  or flower in our spaces are owned now.

  Jojo burrs make me skid my feet on lawn

  being wary of long grass, like any bushman.

  Begged and scavenged plants survived dry spells

  best, back when I’d to garden in absentia:

  Dad wouldn’t grow flowers, or water ornamentals.

  He mounded for the Iroquois three sisters,

  corn beans and squash. And melons, and tomatoes.

  Those years we’d plant our live Christmas tree

  in January when it shed its brittle bells

  and the drought sun bore down like dementia.

  Now bloom-beds displace fox-ripped rooster plumes

  in from paddocks, in our cattle-policed laager;

  trampled weeds make wharves for the indigo waterhen.

  ANGOPHORA FLORIBUNDA

  That country seemed one great park

  in which stood big bridal trees

  raining nectar and white thread

  as native things ate their blossom

  like hills of wheaten bread

  and we called them Apple trees

  our homesickness being sore

  if you took up land where they grew

  it kept your descendants half poor …

  but farmers rarely cut them down.

  They survive from the Eden of the country

  because the wood’s useless and rots fast

  and because they’re the Eden of the country.

  Slashed leaves feed stock in a drought

  and the tree, in its dirt-coloured bark

  and snakes-and-laddery branchage

  often grows aslant, heeled over

  like an apple-pie schooner aground

  on the shores of a North Coast pig farm.

  Aged ones get cancerous

  with humps of termite nest.

  They shed their rotted limbs

  to lie around them like junk

  which only decay can burn.

  A chewed-paper termite city

  set alight in an Apple trunk

  will rage all night and never

  ignite its crucible of wood.

  A veteran may drop most of itself

  in one crash autumn, and re-grow from its boot.

  Uselessness, sprawl and resurrection

  are this apple’s fruit.

  AT THE FALLS

  High mountain plateau edged

  with vertical basalt cliffs

  like black hung chain, like sprockets

  conveying a continual footage

&n
bsp; of water, abruptly curved

  and whitening down into clouds.

  On a damp earth track

  to other viewing points, a

  young wife twists her ankle.

  She falls painfully. Her husband,

  his eyes everywhere like a soldier,

  mutters Get up! in a panic voice,

  Quick! There are people coming.

  She struggles up, furious,

  spurning his hand. A cloud

  like steam rises out of the gorge.

  Over years, this memory

  will distil its essence: fear

  of the house her eccentric man

  inhabits, and what is done

  there, or away from there.

  That she is the human he has married.

  TRUE YARN

  A man approaches the edge

  of his life, which has miscarried.

  He looks down the enormous wall

  of rock to the ocean-boulders

  far below. They seem the teeth

  in a white-green tidal blender

  that won’t fail him. He launches

  off, just as the mightiest wave

  ever recorded at Sydney gathers

  lift in the chimney of the Gap like

  a freight elevator, like the swelling

  fore-smoke of a ballistic missile silo,

  like a foam-faced cosmic air bag

  that receives him, then drops back

  so fast he not only can’t sink

  but has to cling to its narrowing

  thunder-roof of drowning seagulls

  and the collapse is so abundant

  that, storeys above the death-studs,

  he is surfed away in the wash

  a mile clear of the cliffs

  and left to the fast life boat.

  More failure? Yet his rescue looked

  like a wrathful peremptoriness.

  AN AUSTRALIAN LEGEND

  It is the time of day

  when shadows come in like animals

  and shelter under their trees

  when shade also tightens

  in along the web of gullies

  rehearsing old treelines and flood

  all this drainage stops short

  at a country of salt marsh

  plodded in by dipping birds

  this is the ancient sea shore

  where the Aunt in her magic-propelled

  boat carried off the younger brother

  from the big island of men

  to the island of left-handed women

  who kill men on sight

  wild mirror-image fighters

  their arm doesn’t cross their breasts

 

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