21 December 2011

Looking after Uncle Bill's house


Dear Uncle Bill,
How is your holiday in Italy?
Things have been pretty normal here at your place.
Nothing to worry about really.
Fifi ate two lizards
and got bitten by a redback
after she dug up the neighbour’s strawberries.
She’s okay though.
Only a week at the vet’s.

Lightning struck the TV antenna
and shorted the computer, the DVD and the TV,
but the toaster wasn’t affected at all.

The floods (you heard about those?)
ruined the carpet
but Mum rescued most of the furniture
except the lounge suite.

Oh, and that big gum tree
that Mr Ross kept asking you to have cut down,
well, it finally gave way.
So much for the garage.

I almost forgot to mention your car
- it’s been off the road for so long now –
the motor finally decided to pack it in
just as Mum was reversing up the drive
and didn’t see the fish pond.

Otherwise things are pretty boring here.
I guess Europe is much more exciting,
although the bushfires are getting closer to the house now.
By the way, you did pay the insurance before you left,
didn’t you?

from the night beach


from the night beach we walked
up onto the moon-bright headland
stood on the cliff echoing surf
your black hair whipped my eyes
we held each other against the wind
and the storm blowing up from the south

back at the wharf
the black sky cracked open
huddling under pines
my body ached for you
in the downpour a car
had caught fire at traffic lights
and blazed furiously

Australia Day


We are the no soul people
in the not our land

Old stones in Galway
hide my once heart
and a curragh on an Aran beach
waits still to transport me

A day was all I spent there
and didn’t hear the Gaelic at all
I was born and bred in Sydney
closer to Kakadu than Connemarra

We are the ghosts
who gave them trinkets on the sand,
chased them from La Perouse
to oblivion and back again

I’ve been to Uluru
in a bus full of tourists
and call this my country

20 December 2011

Divorce


night       you drive around this bend
that is strangely familiar
sea on the right
big hotels on the left

you look at the sea
moonlight on the water
you round the bend
and you’re high above it all

you hear a woman scream
a body shoots down at an angle
like a meteorite
crashing to earth

someone rushes over to her
you see her shape in the ground
you hesitate
then decide not to go over

Denial


Srebrenica did not fall.
The soldiers, being Christians,
saw the light,
chose not to rape and kill
but instead turned on their commanders
who worked as part-time butchers.

The men and boys
were only hiding in the forest
for a laugh
and now are gathering
for a game of football.