MAR BUCKNELL
4 POEMS
*
lichen on headstones
even the marking
of death
makes life possible
necessary
*
the sky can kill you
laugh back
*
irony is lost
on the iron
*
o
brave new word
*
[reprinted from MINIKINS, 2010 (PO Box 1497, East Victoria Park, WA 6981)]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
GLENN COOPER
4 POEMS
Remembering Jerry Hall in Brian Ferry’s Let’s Stick Together Video Clip
(after Paulus Silentiarius)
I was eight years old in 1976.
I had never seen lips
so plump and red,
eyes so inviting,
hair so
lustrous. The way
she moved, cat-like
and purring, sashaying
across the stage …
If she had plucked
just one strand
of that golden hair
and tied my wrists
with it, even at such
a tender age,
I’d have pleaded
with her
never to release me.
oOo
Second-Hand
In the second hand record store I sift
through row after row of dusty LPs,
pausing from time to time to consider
a name scrawled lazily in blue ink,
a coffee cup stain, a trace of ancient
lipstick smeared across a dog-eared
copy of Fleetwood Mac’s Greatest Hits.
It is in these places we discover the
true history of the world, of ourselves,
the way things were and in some fashion
will always be, though the discs
of plastic have now turned to metal,
and the people with whom we shared
these songs are vanished or
changed, our emotional landscape
often untended, like scratched vinyl, hissy
and unlistenable, as we ride the eternal
turntable on its circular orbit
into the dust of all our tomorrows.
oOo
Ashtray
The house grown quiet and still,
a single butt of a cigarette now rests
in the smooth rut of a glass ashtray
filled with dozens of other such butts,
this one still smoldering, sending
its tiny but significant plumes
into the atmosphere already heavy
with loss and departure, like a wispy
trail of vapor behind a jet aircraft
high overhead, its occupants weary
with thoughts of arrival and destination.
oOo
After The Power Has Gone Out
(for Ronald Baatz)
Huddled under
the avalanche of covers
he reads by flashlight
in a storm of ice and wind,
the electricity gone
the same way
as his dear old Dad –
still with us somehow
but no longer visible
as photons or
however it is light
appears to us as
we go about our sad
and inexorable ways,
our days habitual
like the seasons,
the earth turning slowly
in its starry grave.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MICHAEL FITZGERALD-CLARKE
A Quadraphonic Whisper
Inside the inside, the world flutters, and eyes close.
Each search is an appeal to mindfulness.
Browning and Patmore walk arm in arm from the earth.
All the flowering plants speak purely, gracefully.
Our genes carry our imagination along the long diagonals.
The unreal duties lovers assume for a while develop, then fade.
It is in the smaller things – governments, wars, religions –
we get lost. Let the promise of a single fleeting breaker
dying in the shallows be reason enough.
*
“An instant of pure love is more precious to God and the soul, and more profitable to the Church than all other good works together, though it may seem as if nothing were done.”
-- St. John of the Cross
Her soul is engaged to the highest cloud, and when
she moves, its aimlessness becomes otherworldly.
How do we salute the inspired upper reaches?
Surely, as the sun drops from the afternoon,
nothing is more precious than our umbilical thread
to voice, to words that pass through walls
and give images of those walls, for, little by little,
shapes of life compose, troubling a soil
in the throes of divorcing bedrock for the sky.
*
“No great art, no really effective ethical teaching can come from any but such as know immeasurably more than they will attempt to communicate.”
-- Coventry Patmore
I know an instant, then I am gone.
I learn from the coldness of fires.
I am an animal, and I am the flame of the sun.
I take the air, and fashion it.
I use opium, and marijuana, and prepare for sailing.
I peel the arms and legs from my body.
I own knives and sexual desires.
I beg for the status of language.
Ask me, and I will courteously reduce these things.
*
The lovers are gentle. Goodbye, friend,
the plane is on the tarmac. Watch the seas below,
and believe. Believe in the driftwood and shells,
believe in change, growth, the poor courageous holiness
we all somehow sense through computer and TV screens.
In the hall are all the shoes ever worn.
The accompanying souls say what they said before:
be aware, tolerate, give each special situation a value.
Why are we so occluded we starve our insight?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAROL JENKINS
POST
Galileo says people are like paper;
would I dispense with 'are' or 'like'?
Last life I was a silver fish
this time I took to ink,
and when the post floats in
with a letter, an elegant sketch -
simple paper, complex idea, Oh I
praise reading's merit, to deliver
an afterlife, a parallel, a re-incarnation
a vicarious sense of being someone &
somewhere else, in here and now
while holding nothing but cellulose
perhaps a gram of ink, a slip of graphite,
a lined page, headed 'Dear Carol'.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
CORNELIS VLEESKENS
4 POEMS
PARASOL
I soar on paper wings
it was never
about your sister!!
I shuffle my feet
on the doorstep
of the Julian Ashton
School of Art
it is 1968
your lines are smooth
oOo
ANOTHER DAY
tomorrow
is the feast of All Saints
today
it's a Lavazza torino
and a walk
up the deserted main street
I'm visiting
the 18th century
with Schmitt
Fodor Meder and Wilms
fried chicken
choy sum on rice
during a break in the music
Sri Lanka demolish Australia
marinated feta
kalamata olives
sundried tomatoes
a fine
Boorolong Road
2006 Shiraz
oOo
HONGKONG INTERLUDE
linen wash
never smelled so sweet:
hung on bamboo poles
high above
this polluted Kowloon street
congee in the alley
for a hearty breakfast
Ezra loved the intricacy
of the Chinese character
almost as much as Michaux
but I still
can't make out the signs
avoid the snakes
on Fuk Wa
and settle for roast duck
Kwan Yin
the Goddess of Mercy
smiles from her niche
I leave Bronwyn
to her family on the island:
it'd never come to anything anyhow
out on the harbour
a junk passes
red and orange painted prow
oOo
COMPOSITIE: ROOD/WIT/BLAUW
Dopper and Vermeulen
resume their stoush
a bit like Mondriaan
employing a Toorop
to block the draught
from a broken window
the public
is momentarily bemused
then walks on
Kronos ticks time
the rain (as always) the rain
lightning on the ridge
a black Opel cruises by
always shop at Ivens
for your photographic needs
Piet Hein sets out
to capture the Silver Fleet:
the cupboard is bare
and energy costs are on the rise
tap
taptap tap
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CONTRIBUTORS :
MAR BUCKNELL; Perth spoken-word poet. His inter-media performance includes The History of Glass (in 2008) featuring his poems, Alan Boyd's soundscapes & Stuart Reid's live drawing. This was the sequel to Unawares, performed in 2000 at the Artrage festival. Minikins & other chapbooks available from the author at P O Box, 1497; East Victoria Park, W A,, 6981. Contact : marbucknell@gmail.com
GLEN COOPER, MICHAEL FITZGERALD-CLARKE, CAROL JENKINS & CORNELIS VLEESKENS have all appeared in Poems & Pieces previously. These are all recent writings.
Long may their poetry prosper!
oOo
Showing posts with label Mar Bucknell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mar Bucknell. Show all posts
Sunday, December 5, 2010
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