FOR FREE VIEWING/DOWNLOADING OF PDFs OF MY BOOKS:
- LONG DISTANCE POET (WOODBINE PRESS)
- NEW SELECTED POEMS (WOODBINE PRESS)
- NEW COLLECTED POEMS 1952 – 1012 (KARDOORAIR PRESS)
SEE THE LAST PARAGRAPH OF THIS SECTION, JUST BEFORE THE SUB-HEADING OF WOODBINE PRESS
* * *
At Mullumbimby primary school Bill Bouveret read us the verse of Henry Lawson and ‘Banjo’ Patterson, and this world was all around us. At the age of ten I’d written my first poem (‘My Bike’), at a time when children were certainly not encouraged to do such things. I’d recited a selection of my own poems at the 1954 Wardell Primary School Christmas Tree, precocious brat that I must have been. My Wilson grandmother was in the audience as I recall, looking equally proud and embarrassed at the same time.
In 1968 I planted a Lord Howe Island banyan tree at East Wardell, at the site of pioneer settlement of my great grandparents. At the last Ballina Council of 2021 this tree was officially recognised as the Shire’s Poet’s Tree.
Location Map for Poet’s Tree at East Wardell
At Mullumbimby High School my English teacher, Wal Wardman, had introduced me to Shelley, Slessor, Shakespeare and Keats at Mullumbimby High. Paul Lamb lectured us on Housman, Hopkins and Eliot at Armidale Teachers’ College, and required us to write some poems. Housman had spoken to me (of sex, death and suicide back on the farm) when I was seventeen. Seeds had been sown.
In 1967 I fell in love with Margaret Macintyre and wrote bad verse. In 1968, while working at Armidale Teachers’ College (from 1968 – 1972), I switched my creative energies from painting to writing poetry. My verse improved as I fell out of love after the marriage failed, and I’ve kept on writing obsessively since that time.
Employment at The Australian Museum, Sydney, quite literally the ‘House of the Muses’, was where my poetry was consolidated. Poetic fragments were conceived in the bath, in bed, or at the traffic lights. I honed my poems on the ferry (the primary quiet-time in my working day), or at boring meetings.
In 1975, after experiencing considerable trouble having individual poems accepted by magazines, I was published under the pseudonym of ‘Eileen’ Wilson in Mother I’m Rooted, an Anthology of Australian Women Poets (my own lesser Ern Malley hoax). Not having had a ‘pater’ meant I had little idea of the ‘patriarchy’ that these middle class city women were all carrying on about. Nor did I like quotas as they distinguished against talent at selection’s edge, and to publish a book of female poets was equivalent to producing a book a brown-eyed poets to my mind, as gender and eye colour were both genetically determined.
This turned out to be a very bad career move in hindsight, resulting in me being sin-binned in certain quarters for two score years and six, necessitating in the creation of Woodbine Press.
The story of my quest to become a poet is told in my three books of Poetic Memoirs: Book One, The Mullumbimby Kid: a portrait of the poet as a child; Book Two, The Melancholy Dane: a portrait of the poet as a young man; and Book Three, Long-Distance Poet: a portrait of the poet as an old fart (the latter being designed as a primary-source for future scholars who may wish to study the Australian Poetry Wars (and the Gender Wars) of the late 20th Century.
I present electronic copies of my books as examples of my poetry/poetic genesis:
- Long Distance Poet download PDF
- New Selected Poems download PDF
- New Collected Poems download PDF
Please feel free to download and save these files, share and circulate them. You can do anything except sell them. Printed copies of these and other publications are available through Woodbine Press.
Woodbine Press
Apart from the Feminist backlash about ‘Eileen’, my chance of becoming a published poet (in the pre-electronic days) were somewhat less than the possibility of my being kicked to death by a mule back on the farm. Woodbine Press was established in 1982 as a subsidiary of the legendary publishers of Australian poetry, Edwards & Shaw (who published the first books of A.D. Hope, Les Murray, David Campbell and many more), with Dick Edwards and Rod Shaw (of Edwards & Shaw) as my silent partner. Dick went on to become a friend, and an important father figure in my life.
My first book of poetry, Banyan (1982), was printed with hot metal by Dick Edwards and Rod Shaw, the last book of poetry to come from their press before their retirement. Liberty, Egality Fraternity! (1984), The Dragon Tree (1985), Wild Tamarind (1987) and Falling Up Into Verse (1989) were subsequently produced by Dick Edwards and Rod Shaw, prior to Rod Shaw’s death, the last of this series being dedicated to Dick Edwards, ‘pig-farmer, philosopher, printer, publisher, and poet’.
The layout for The Rose Garden (1991) was done by Dick Edwards. With Dick’s failing health, Chaos Theory (1997) was the first Woodbine book to be produced electronically, and he saw an advanced copy of Cosmos Seven in 1998 (also dedicated to him), just before he died. All subsequent Woodbine books (post 1998) were produced without his invaluable editorial input.
My early books of poetry had all been graced by the delicate pencil drawings of Elizabeth McAlpine, until she contracted breast cancer. Asteroid Belt (2002, without illustrations) was dedicated to Elizabeth, who died in 2006. Some of her illustrations were recycled in Collected Poems (Kardoorair Press, 2002) and New Selected Poems (2010).
My exploits in publishing have essentially been a labour of love. Amy Witting’s Travel Diary (1985), John Carey’s Strip-Shopping for the Unemployed (1999), and John Ryan’s Tales of New England (2008), were also published under the Woodbine imprint. Now with the wonder of the Internet I hope my books may find a greater audience in the wider world, and that some of them become collector’s items sometime down the track.
Since 1982 I have published thirty books (through Woodbine Press, Hale & Iremonger, Kangaroo Press, Rainforest Publishing, Kardoorair Press, and the Royal Botanic Gardens Trust – of verse, about verse, prose works, and social histories of the Sydney Gardens and Domain), as listed below:
I was a guest on ABC ‘Poetica’ (3 December 2005, repeated 26 January 2008), in an episode called ‘A Stroll Through the Gardens’, talking about Poetic foci (plus poems) in the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney and the Sydney Domain: The ABC’s reference is at this link ; an audio of the program is here:
A reading at Montsalvat is at this link
Books by Edwin Wilson:
- 2020, Family Tree: Old Friends, Rich Relations, family history, available for free downloading, at Downloads, on this Website (Woodbine Press)
- 2020, Stardust Painter-Poet II, an upgrade of my 2015 book, with all the new significant paintings since 2015, also available for free downloading, ‘at Downloads’, on this Website (Woodbine Press)
- 2019, Long-Distance Poet: A Portrait of the Poet as an Old Fart, a limited edition of Poetic Memoirs, Book Three (Woodbine Press)
- 2018, Synthesis, a selection of my poems set to a complete collections of the pencil drawings of the late Elizabeth McAlpine (Woodbine Press)
- 2017, Lord Nelson, Uncle Oliver and I: the Life and Death of Oliver Bainbridge, a much-expanded version of my 2013 Monograph (Woodbine Press)
- 2015, Stardust Painter-Poet (Edwin Wilson: Paintings and Poems), larger-format Art Book of both my paintings and my poems (Woodbine Press)
- 2014, Mullumbimby Dreaming, Art Book of Mullumbimby paintings and poems and Catalogue to an exhibition at Tweed River Gallery, Murwillumbah (Woodbine Press)
- 2013, Oliver Bainbridge – Lord Nelson’s Great Grandson? (Woodbine Press)
- 2012, New Collected Poems: 1952 – 2012 (Kardoorair Press)
- 2012, second edition The Mullumbimby Kid (Woodbine Press)
- 2010, New Selected Poems (Woodbine Press)
- 2009, My Brother Jim, (Poetry, Woodbine Press)
- 2006, The Melancholy Dane: A Portrait of the Poet as a Young Man (Poetic Memoirs, Book Two, Woodbine Press)
- 2004, Poetry of Place, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain, Royal Botanic Gardens Trust)
- 2002, Asteroid Belt, (Poetry, Woodbine Press)
- 2002, Anthology: Collected Poems (Kardoorair Press)
- 2001, Cedar House, (Gothic Novel and Australian ‘Wuthering Heights’, Woodbine Press)
- 2000, The Mullumbimby Kid: A Portrait of the Poet as a Child, (Poetic Memoirs, Book One, Woodbine Press)
- 1998, Cosmos Seven, (Selected Poems, Woodbine Press)
- 1997, Chaos Theory, (Poetry, Woodbine Press)
- 1993, The Botanic Verses, (Poetry, Rainforest Publishing)
- 1992, The Wishing Tree, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain, Kangaroo Press, out of print)
- 1991, The Rose Garden, (Poems, Woodbine Press)
- 1990, Songs of the Forest, (Rainforest Poems, Hale & Iremonger)
- 1989, Falling Up Into Verse, (Poetic Handbook, Woodbine Press)
- 1987, Wild Tamarind, (Science fiction, Woodbine Press)
- 1986, Discovering the Domain (Ed.), (Social History, Hale & Iremonger, out of print)
- 1985, The Dragon Tree, (Poetry, Woodbine Press)
- 1984, Liberty, Egality, Fraternity! (Novel, Woodbine Press. Please note ‘egality’ is a word derived from ‘egalitarianism’)
- 1983, Drawn from Life (Ed.), (Catalogue to an early exhibition of Botanic Art, Royal Botanic Gardens, out of print)
- 1982, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney (Ed.), (‘Guide to the Gardens’, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, out of print)
- 1982, Banyan, (Poetry, Woodbine Press)
Poetry, Post New Collected Poems
I was bitterly disappointed when New Collected Poems (my beautiful book brought out just prior to my seventieth birthday) was essentially ignored by the Literati (except for one good review in The Australian Writer). So much anxiety, hope, energy, ego and aspiration is invested in each small book of poems, these precious children of our laboured nights. Imagine how you would feel if your ‘Collected Works’ (derived from many such volumes of ’emotional investment’ produced as the result of sixty years of application to the craft of verse) had been ignored (which paradoxically was even worse than being mauled, as I’d been mauled before). Horace had referred to the ‘touchy race of poets’. It’s a jungle out there, this poetry scene, and as Ted Hughes had said, ‘you expect to be mauled… [as it] … goes with the territory’.
The Australian poetry scene has always been so incredibly ‘politically-correct’ (and even more PC than thee) and faction ridden (see my ‘Open Letter to Live Poets, Literary Editors, Reviewers, Academics, Students, Minister for the Arts type staff, Literature Board Funding Committee Wallahs, Publisher’s Assistants, and Organisers of Literary Festivals’, as found in the hard-copy version of my New Selected Poems (but left out of the electronic version)). From my perspective so much of the Australian poetry scene (since the 1970s) had been taken over by ‘Revisionists’, each going to the same parties and Conferences and reviewing each others books. And sadly as far as I was concerned it seemed as if ‘they’ had long memories, and ‘had kept a little list’. The seventies and the eighties were a terrible time for a ‘live white male’ to try to break into the poetry game. In my Open Letter I had said ‘one gets much closer to truth as one approaches life’s finishing tape, as one fears failure less, as one has less to lose, and is less worried about what other people may think. Mark Twain [had] said you get closer to truth when you are dead, and preferably dead for a long time’. It is still my hope that my work will be ‘revised’ one day, when this current crop (myself included) has long been scythed. On being passed over so many times for the Queensland Poetry Festival I had had enough, and retired (hurt) from Poetry Australia, to focus on my paintings.
I’d read somewhere that Judith Wright had ‘retired’ from writing poems when she turned seventy. In truth I was exhausted after such a long and sustained mental effort; my stamina levels were much reduced, I was essentially ‘post-poetry, and far too mellow to write good verse, but still have a strong impulse to paint’, (New Collected Poems, x), but felt I was getting better as a painter.
My Art Catalogue, Stardust Painter-Poet (Edwin Wilson: Paintings and Poems), was picked up on Henry Lawson’s birthday, 17 June 2015, which I took as an auspicious day. Many of the significant paintings in this book were done post 2003, after my retirement from paid work, as part of my artistic ‘late-flowering’. This book was the inspiration of my 2016 RAS ‘Exhibition Stardust Painter-Poet’, that was opened and positively reviewed by John McDonald, art critic, Sydney Morning Herald. lift me out of the squabbling world of Australian poetry, that I should be assessed on both my paintings and my many books.
A number of lesser poems have trickled out since the publication of my New Collected Poems: ‘Recognition Test’; ‘Ah Am the Way’; revised last stanza of ‘Strangler Fig’; ‘Anima Poem’; ‘Summer Storms’; ‘Deep Time’; ‘Forty Years’; and ‘Skara Brae’, ‘Brunswick Heads 1940s’ (a development of ‘Summer Storms’, as published in The Bryon Shire Echo, 29 July 2015, p. 12); ‘New Spectacles’; ‘Tidge Has Gone with Tractors’; ‘Pumpkin Girl’; ‘Mangrove Poem’; ‘Flower Poem’; ‘Famine Orphan’, ‘Perspective’ (two new stanzas); ‘Humanity’; ‘Crows Nest Derro’; and Pumpkin II’.
At this stage I can’t see myself bringing out another volume (of my ‘late poetic flowerings’), so I have included them here (in chronological order), as an addendum to my New Collected Poems (for citation purposes):
Recognition Test
(18 June 2012)
I failed a recognition test
the other day
with Lindy C,
having failed another one
of the young man
from Robin’s Nest,
now jowled and bald –
and having just replaced
my Website photograph
made me reflect aloud
how Margaret Dawn
had been restructured
over time.
Having failed to recognise Lindy Chamberlain on TV (who had been rather rather sexy when young), my wife Cheryl had shown me a photograph of the actor who played in Robin’s Nest, a TV show of a young man with a dolly wife running a restaurant with a one-armed Irish waiter. He had not aged well.
Ah Am the Way
(Management Review)
(14 August 2012)
Ah am the way
Ah am the light,
when black is white
and white is black
(no shades of grey)
Brothers and Sisters
you have strayed,
if you repent
and follow me
you will be saved –
when all the bunnies hop
to each buzzword or phrase.
Written as a result of having seen so many management reviews, with all their associated pseudo-religious jargon and bullshit, in a long lifetime of work.
Strangler Fig
(19 June 2013)
High from a tree’s moist cleft
a probing radical of hair,
an easy-rider networking in air
as roots adhere in warp and weft;
embracing host in bane caress
as consequence of truth or dare;
some cookoo-flowering affair,
this property is theft.
Revised first stanza of ‘Strangler Fig’, as used in Mullumbimby Dreaming, p. 24
Anima Poem
(14 July 2014, incorporated into ‘Pumpkin II’)
You are my anima
and I your animus,
when I was driven
by a ruthless Muse
to be my star –
when loneliness
knows more than most,
that I am
what I am.
A poem with Jungian overtones.
Summer Storms
(4 November 2014)
Summer at Brunswick Heads
black sand burnt
lettuce seedlings
when the sun made fire
with a lens –
fruit bats at night,
toe-biters crunching
under the street lights –
into this crucible
of rot and mold
I wilt even in shade
on enervating afternoons –
yearning to summer storms,
for cyclones even,
just to ease
the static in the air –
for cleansing rain,
that rainforests may be.
Memories of the intensity of summer heat in childhood at Brunswick Heads.
Deep Time
(22 December 2014)
In human forms of measurement
a cubit was a forearm’s length,
a hand a hand, a foot a foot;
a yard three feet
(the outstretched arm
from nose of king),
humanity is less than skin,
a file-stroke on a fingernail –
when time was measured
by the sun, the season’s turn,
deep-time beyond imagining;
an ancient bubble
in a core of ice,
a saw-toothed graph
that we trespass
on mother earth.
A Great Push launched in ’55
to haunt our atmosphere and seas,
as grapes fermented by the yeast
fruit out-of-season on the vine,
denial funded by dead plants
when time is being/being time,
this poem is written as a test.
A poem about deep time and climate change.
Forty Years
(28 April 2015)
To have grown old
together you and I
my little copper head,
as quick to laughter
as to tears,
sheet anchor, goad, and ballast
to life’s turbulence,
with two score years
of valency to help
domesticate my Muse –
freedom eschewed,
the double-bond of coupling
propitiated with ‘yes dears’,
no more to loiter
on some shady path
but knuckle down
to some career –
a granny now
knit one and purl,
who loved the granny
and the girl.
A poem to 40 years of marriage to Cheryl.
Skara Brae
(6 May 2015)
Down from the Ring of Brogdar
and the Odin Stone,
snug from the arctic howl
in elevated ground
close to the eating sea;
a Neolithic hamlet
honeycombed in shells,
turf-roofed, with central hearth
and beds, rock-cupboards
set in dry-stone walls –
and not some Movie Set
of Hobbit-dom
but the Real Thing –
gave me goose bumps
to think my Danish kin
had reached this edge
of continent,
why did they go?
Back in the bus
we look at new-born
calves and lambs,
so recently released in fields
tucked up against
more dry-stone walls –
same same construction
used in Skara Brae.
Poem inspired by our visit to Skara Brae, Orkney Islands, May 2015, and ‘sister’ poem to ‘Neolithic Church’, ‘Arthur’s Stone’, and ‘Bog Man’.
Brunswick Heads, 1940s
(22 July 2015)
Summer time
at Brunswick Heads,
the Lover’s Walks
on Harrys Hill
with monkey vines
on which to swing
and elkhorn ferns and palms,
where Henry went with Jean –
the bliss of climbing orchids
draped with yellow bells.
Sifting through grit
near studded wrecks
at the river bar,
for coloured stones
with smooth inlays
and broken shells
and urchin’s teeth –
detritus sucked up
from the reef
in summer storms.
Green-algal corn flakes
on the tide,
the lapping froth
went up the channels first
where poddy mullet swam;
then filled the little
valleys of the rippled flat,
dissolving the sand castles
of the soldier ants
stacked up like cannon balls.
The great arc of the Milky Way
and Magellanic Clouds at night,
toe-biters crunching
under the street light,
as fruit bats trace erratic
path from star to star,
to come to grief in the telegraph –
I watched them rot away
To scraps of skin and claw
My father looked like this.
A development of ‘Summer Storms’. Edwin Wilson (then known as ‘Peter’) lived for a short time at Brunswick Heads in the 1940s, as outlined in The Mullumbimby Kid.
New Spectacles
(22 December 2015)
Supine with my new spectacles
in fading light –
Bill Bryson
totting up infirmities
in ‘Little Dribbling’,
my spotted hands
with their protruding veins
(rice paper thin)
come into high relief –
hang on in there Edwin.
Written in a state of shock on viewing my old hands with my new spectacles.
Tidge Has Gone with Tractors
(13/14 January 2016, with apologies to Henry Lawson)
Our Tidge has gone to battle now
‘Gainst sand, the great marauder,
Our Tidge has gone with tractors now
Across the Queensland border.
Now who shall wear the cheerful face
In times when things are slackest?
And who shall whistle round the place
When Fortune frowns her blackest?
The gates are out of order now
All problems are protracted,
The dunny door bangs in the storm
Now Tidge has gone with tractors.
Poor Aunty’s looking thin and white
And Uncle’s most un-well;
And poor old Blucher howls all night
Since Ti-idge has left War-del-ll.
We hid the tyres in the cane
When Probate came a-goading,
We’ll never see his likes again
Now Tidge has crossed the Logan.
His crossing had been so left-field
Amidst the larks and skiving,
An angel stopped my mother’s car
To tell her Tidge was dying.
He’s left us in dejection now
Our hearts with him are roving,
It’s glum on our Selection now
Since Ti-idge lies a-moulding.
Banana leaves still flap and tear
as ‘farmer’s friends’ hitch for the ride,
and raindrops hissing on the stove,
the mangroves sighing with the tide.
Intended to be sung after the style of Chrissie Shaw when she sang Lawson’s ‘Andy Gone with Cattle’ poem at her father Rod Shaw’s funeral (her father Rod was a great whistler), reflecting on the impact of our father’s suicide back on the farm (that had been selected by his grandfather, my great grandfather).
Pumpkin Girl
(11 September 2016, revised 26 November 2018)
Having just read your earthquake of a book,
a village rocked with continental certainties
had warped and slipped;
long-waves of after-shocks bend to the core
of our star-cross-ed-ness,
now you have found your own true north –
and how I loved the slender girl
I took to Manly Beach,
the innocence and awkward sinistral
of missionary and budding scientist,
unhawsered to her motherhood –
that women love their children
more than husbands or first-loves
(not wanting to be moored too soon) –
when men go planting pumpkin seeds
the generations turn,
now I am dizzy when I pull a weed;
yet in this tome we are forever bound
and young –
the moon tugs us,
we tug the moon.
A poem to a reading of the manuscript Anne Butt’s Memoir, Pumpkin, whose cover was based on my painting of my friend Lucian Michalski’s ‘Pumpkin Girl’ statue, as read at Saw-millers Reserve Park, 9 September 2016.
Mangrove Poem
(13-18 September 2016, revised 5-6 February 2017, 14 November 2017)
The earth had moved for me
beyond the Moho line
of my discontinuity,
post-truth;
a long egress
across the nursery
of shrimp and fingerling
each spring and neap,
the waxing cycle of her moon
when oysters spawn,
whose blood is brine –
exposing ribbon-weed and grief,
of muddy Serpentine.
Flower Poem
(A Botanist’s take on flowers, after the style of Erasmus Darwin’s ‘The Botanic Garden’ and ‘Loves of the Plants’ (read in my 20’s), and written after a visit to a perfume factory in France in May (11 July 2017))
Blooms are the genitals
of unwed plants,
so in-your-face and labial,
a row of cancan girls
in frilly skirts
kicking their heels,
show guide-lines
to their nectary –
enticing sugar-gliders, bats,
and birds and bees and wasps,
night-flying moths,
crazy with pheromones
to seek such Bartholin
with proboscis or tongue –
so fey and so beguiling
we become their pollinators,
flaunt them in our homes
all redolent of musk
and hope and ambergris –
an essence fit for bottling.
Famine Orphan
(to my great grandmother Mary Ann Wilson (nee Riordan) (December 2017)
Barefoot colleen with ass
on a Donegal road
at Molly Blooms *
could have been Mary Ann,
my famine orphan
b. Kilmallock, County Limerick
into the Riordan clan
of Royal Bard claim –
work-housed when her father
starved after the ’tatties failed,
exported by Lismoyne
to New South Wales
in eighteen forty nine;
a refugee from blight
in family line,
alone in Sydney Town
aged sixteen years –
an iron bed at Macquarie Place,
indentured at the ’Loo. **
Married a ship’s absconder
chasing gold
from the Antagonist
who’d anglicised his name –
‘Native of Denmark, brown hair, lame,
Five pounds reward’,
to Broulee for their honeymoon,
then on to Araleun, where her hat
blew in the mud;
selected at Blackwall ***
and cleared the gallery
and never left –
barefoot and pregnant
in a rough-hewn hut
of slabs of cabbage palm
(with mud in cracks),
dirt floor, reed-thatched,
and children, five
(one male deceased),
their baby Jim my grandfather.
Her brother, ravenous for spread
had claimed his river mile
across from them,
a little Ireland in the sun
when river was the only road –
his baby, Maggie,
never roamed,
and told me River Stories
at her knee,
with bearded Riordans
hanging on the wall
like bushrangers –
her aunty Mary
buried in the Wardell sand
next to my father Tidge
for all eternity,
at least until the oceans rise –
my banyan as the ****
‘family tree’, resplendent
in her Promised Land.
* At a poetry reading, Molly Blooms, Melbourne, c. 2003, there had been a photograph on the wall of a barefoot young Irish girl on a country road with her donkey
** Woolloomooloo
*** Irish-speaking Mary Rirdon (Riordan) and her Danish-speaking husband, ‘Charles Wilson’, had selected 100 acres on the Richmond River at (East) Wardell, previously known by the aboriginal name of Bingal, and then later as Blackwall
**** My northern-most Lord Howe Island banyan tree (symbolic of the ‘family tree’, now well advanced), had been planted beside the river at East Wardell in 1968. Third cousin Maggie Riordan had told me my Wilson great grandmother (her aunty Mary Rirdan (Riordan)) had been a Famine Orphan (confirmed by Kay Robinson, November 2017). My banyan had been planted close to their original jetty site, adjacent to where their slab-constructed homestead had been built, where I was later to live for my first five years (when Maggie told my mother it had been ‘unlucky’ to build on the site of the previous residence).
Perspective
(Two new stanzas (December 2017) for the last poem in a projected selection, ‘Synthesis’, using all of Elizabeth McAlpine’s pencil drawings. ‘Perspective’ (consisting only of the last stanza of this poem) was first published in Banyan (1982))
Here we are
on a lump in space
who circumnavigate
a ball of burning gas –
when plants are conduits
between rocks and consciousness.
A universe of chance
and eating galaxies,
the randomness
of love and death –
and this is my best
synthesis of poetry and art,
who hurtle round a star.
Beyond the star-dust
of a veil nebula is a
filigree of wisdom –
what are our hopes and fears
but aberrations of light?
For all our passion we
embrace time’s patient love.
‘Synthesis’ (Macquarie Dictionary): the combination of parts or elements, as material substances or objects of thought, into a complex whole.
Humanity
(25 September 2018)
Humanity a school of fish
with pressure cells along
the flank of body politic,
pick up vibrations in the air
the shadow of the roc,
and dart this way and that
avoiding the grey nurse –
beware your wish,
there’ll always be
the predators,
envy and malice
of the scribes and priests,
the isolation ward –
my best advice
surf with a friend.
Crows Nest Derro
(27 October 2018, a poem to Graham Elder, b. Richmond, South Australia, 5 September 1938,
d. in a purpose-built hut behind the Lighthouse Church, Crows Nest, 2 October 2018)
Our village derro
of beanie and scarf
and almost toothless grin,
collected teddy bears
(lined in a row)
to compensate
for wounded soul.
A natty dresser, folded
blankets where he slept
down from my studio,
ordered the junk mail
where a shop had closed;
died in a snug
behind the Lighthouse Church.
What daemons had deflected
his life’s path –
what fortitude
cleft to the bone,
that penury infect
the child he was,
or child he did not know?
Pumpkin II
(4 August, 2019)
Her precious book unsettled
as it warmed my heart,
that skipped at photographs
and turn of phrase,
a fated meeting
at the Police Boys Dance,
Moon River swelled
and flooded banks,
the Universe and I concur
she was my first true love.
For she was Blossom,
she was Spring,
and I was Photosynthesis –
the sun shone on us
for a while, in Gardens
and in the Domain,
then shadows fell
across my Animus –
with poets sadly
a conflicted race.
Not having known paternal love
(and not grown in another’s shade),
I bristled at her talk of God
who had not ‘saved’ –
Jean had been gutted
when Tidge pushed delete,
left me shit-scared of
kitchen teas and Tupperware,
and Wedding Bells,
and Cupid’s dart.
And then the sun went out
and I was bleeding on a road
with stoma closed,
and comatosed,
and xylem flow reduced.
When the sap flowed
she’d not remove her top,
put orchids round
her glass sarcophagus,
abandoned to ‘respect’ –
still driven by a ruthless Muse
to find my Star
in premonitions of unknown,
gene-mapping of Drosophila,
she was an orchid flower –
stigma, stamen, style and ovary,
whose Yang was greater
than her Yin –
my Selfish Gene and I retreat
to nip a romance in the bud,
as adjunct to this Crying Game
who loved her Pilgrim Soul –
preserve the ice sheets lest we
drown in fountain-heads of Agape,
and what was done
in our own Seven-Up –
a different girl who
was to be a geriatric mum,
more than a footnote in Aust. Lit. –
take care my Anima, take care.
Epitaph
(28 February 2020)
Walk softly in this scented sphere
a poet’s ashes scattered here,
that we come from the dust of stars
and nature is God’s avatar –
to call a kindred spirit home,
and blest* be all who tend this stone.
* have used the alternative (shorter) spelling of ‘blessed’ to make for a shorter line
The Scream IV
(Stand Little Lass Between Me and the Sun)*
(19 April 2020)
Diogenes was at the beach
replete with sunnies on his nose,
and had not thrown away his towel,
when Olive Cotton came along
(the shadow of a daylight moon)
to hold a lantern to his face,
still searching for an honest man –
and took a photograph of
feigned surprise, the canine
howl of Edvard Munch,
a jetty near unhallowed ground,
as Olive walked across his grave.
‘I am Diogenes, the dog’,
he had replied, ‘Don’t steal
my sun because I bite’.
I’ve known of goose-flesh
all my life,
and the psychology of ‘cold’ –
my father’s bones in Wardell sand,
a lover’s quarrel with the world,
some ‘mute inglorious Milton’
of the farm interred –
a new poem brewing
as heart-burn.
When doctors say ‘I’m here to help’
it’s time to run like bloody hell
from orchidectomy –
the first days of my phoney war
with malware coursing in my blood,
and lymph glands part of the chicane.
‘I’d rather be myself’, I said,
and not become ‘Eileen’
and ‘pass’ on chemo-cide,
let slip the Harpies
and their raven’s call –
FAAAAAAARK!
*An Ekphrastic Poem (submitted to ‘The Shadow Catchers’ (Red Room Company, 2020)), written on viewing the mock ‘scream’ on the shaded face of ‘The Photographer’s Shadow’, by Olive Cotton, while thinking about Diogenes (as one does), soon after an aggressive cancer diagnosis. When Alexander the Great had sought out Diogenes (on a beach somewhere) and asked what he could do for him, the Philosopher is reputed to have replied, ‘Stand a little less between me and the sun’, thus the slight twist in the sub-title of my poem.
I had been to Melbourne to see the Munch exhibition when it was in Australia, and had learnt that the jetty (of ‘The Scream’) was close to a special cemetery for suicides, and Scandinavian angst. My Danish/Irish father had committed suicide before I was born, something that had been all hushed up, but this event had totally altered the pathway of my life.
Just prior to Christmas (2019) after a diagnosis of a Grade IV cancer, and going for ‘quality’ rather than ‘quantity’ of life, I had opted against having chemo-cide or a chemical orchidectomy (both horrible choices, and the source of my own ‘scream’ in this poem, prior to the Coronavirus pandemic looming front-of-mind), while conscious of a greater irony that the latter treatment would have made my poetic alter ego ‘Eileen’ almost a reality, and so much more poetically correct.
At three years off eighty (about the age when Munch had painted ‘Between the Clock and the Bed’), I don’t write poetry so much these days as it disrupts my metabolism and bio-rhythms (and I find painting much more benign), but ‘The Photographer’s Shadow’ had moved me in unexpected ways. I had suspected and now know the ‘scream’ (of Olive’s subject Max Dupain) was part of a ‘staged’ composition of feigned surprise (from the Olive Cotton biography by Helen Ennis), and Diogenes certainly would not have worn twee sunnies.
My (February 2020) ‘Scream’ poem (written in full consciousness of Allen Ginsberg’s ‘Howl’ poem, but not in imitation of it in any way), came very quickly (with apologies to Thomas Gray’s ‘Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard’ (with its ‘mute inglorious Milton’ reference to my ‘tractor driver’ father), to be polished over a couple of months.
In some ways I was not surprised (after 45 years of non-inclusion because of the ‘Eileen’ incident, and when emails and calls to the Queensland Poetry Society were not returned), to hear the competition was won by some Feminist Orthodoxy, ‘I Grew Up A Shadow Girl, With a Man Outlined Inside Me’. Say no more.
‘The Scream IV’ (19 April 2020), is my latest version of this developing, and what I think is a powerful poem.
Secular Prayer to an End Game
(3 June 2021)
Some fifteen months out from my OBE*
from one who’s had capacity to do,
and love the gentle rhythm
of my Crowie days –
a morning coffee at my studio,
my Cappuccino Terrace and its
secret gardens, front and back;
was shaken-up after a fall –
no emails from the other side,
and not to see my grandchildren
grow up, and how I’d miss
my wife and goad, my kids, old friends,
a painter’s life –
this symphony of tone,
a mottled shade from the
Photinias in our street,
the new growth of an
Elkhorn’s leaf, and kingianum buds;
my banyan trees at East Wardell,
Chincogan grazed by cows –
give me the grace to navigate
my end game as it flows –
when to accept what I don’t know,
and when to acquiesce.
* Over Bloody Eighty
Poet’s Tree
(22 December 2012)
Doddery and ‘dotting’ in my studio
post-diagnosis, trying
to make each painting sing
with points of textured hue;
to help consolidate a legacy
of books beyond ‘Eileen’,
and day of reckoning –
outflank the bastards
with tenacity and grit –
illiterate Y chromosome,
a long way from the farm.
The Danish farmer and
his Famine Orphan wife,
a split-slab pioneer house
and pioneer wharf,
when river was the only road –
my banyan tree at East Wardell,
and painter-poet’s sacred site.
To a Cousin Who Takes Solace from Dead Birds
(1 April, 2022)
(Bryant Bainbridge)
A sprawling Albatross upon
the strand at New World’s edge,
crumpled and bent, with head
askew as Jesus on the cross,
and feathers splayed as Archaeopteryx –
diminished bounty of the main
last supper even there to find
as potent of apocalypse?
Scions of salty blood belie –
all who would soar and dream
are drawn to sea and transience,
and beauty that must die –
black box of the Anthropocene
as lines upon the sand.
Afterlife
(modified version of poem written when my mother died, for my friend Alan Torrens)
(20 May 2022)
Consider the lilies
of the field, arisen
from inanimate,
that plants link rocks
with sentience and flesh –
the best spin I could
ever put on death,
to feed our ashes
to the living glebe
that we become a tree –
our minerals now in
flowers, leaves and bark,
consumed by parrots
sugar-gliders, butterflies and bees,
and this will be
our afterlife –
all flesh is gass.