Saturday 31 May 2014

Mole Creek, Hobbit Cottage 3

And, now, the jaundiced stain beyond the paddocks
becomes a glow,
and the sun rises,
crowning above a hill like a tumulus.
The stout window panes
fill with gold dust.
Encouraged, aroused,
the fire licks and spits
in the cast-iron hearth.

A filament of spider's web
slides and glistens
just outside the window.
The birds sing!
They sing at this sudden
orgy of impermanence.

Mole Creek, Hobbit Cottage 2

Last night, the fire would not draw.
An unexpected puff of smoke
issued from the vent like a spectre,
and we pressed together
under a quilt.
So, this is what quality is!
Substance, endurance.
I have never felt its Protestant assurance
before.
Nothing in our house was ever so heavy, so wrought.
Even the chairs that have lived with me
for fifty-seven years
do not have this weight.
(They now sit outside my back door).

No one would ever dare leave these chairs
in the weather!
So, that is why they believe in such a practical God-
unruffled, predictable;
a quality God with exquisite joins.
Even the ghosts here are tangible:
they thump up and down the roof
in the night,
or get down our throats
and make us cough.

Oh! I never felt the world so solid!
Even the birds seem to know their place,
chattering away in polite accents;
reading from King James.

Mole Creek, Hobbit Cottage 1

Gentle morning!
Singed sunrise,
sallow behind trees
still blackened by night.
Sleep in a foreign place,
and we stuck chairs
weighing a ton
under doorknobs.
Everything is so heavy and solid
in the stone and blackwood house.
I have never experienced such weight-
such spirit-levelled craftsmanship.
Even the curtains are heavy,
almost too heavy to push aside.

Mother Tongue


Mad World Gary Jules
 
All these years, and you would not play it for me.

Sometimes, you would reach for it,

rest it across your thighs, and strum, haphazardly,

a few incomplete chords.

 

Why won’t you play? I wondered, afraid to ask,

but wishing for it as much as I longed to hear

you speak in your mother tongue.

 

(You were washing the dishes,

and watching out the window-

Say something for me? I urged.

And, gently, you spoke words

that swooped lazily across the sky

caught low in my backyard.

I asked what you had said,

and you told me you had made a poem

about the playful sweep of a brown bird

from walnut tree to roof.)

 

One time, you plucked carefully,

with the gentlest of moth feet,

and you sang a lullaby.

But, oh! it was over so quickly

and all that was left behind

was uncertainty,

the way that you can hear a windchime

in the distance, and stop,  in silence,

to wait, unsure, for the sound to repeat itself.

 

I don’t know why you decided,

after so long,

to lift the timber hollow torso onto your lap

and start to play,

with your big, calloused hands-

the big-knuckled, square hands of a

hardworking man.

Your square fingertips fumbled the strings

and you bent your silver-fox head forward

and started to whistle- breathily-

the tune of a sad and haunting song.

And then you started to sing.

 

And then it was one song after the other,

and, soon, I sang along with you,

and, after all these years, it was a communion,

it was the blameless coming together

we had never expected to have.

 

I didn’t want it to stop.

It was like when you find a white wallaby

grazing in your backyard by the sea, on an island,

in the dark, and you stand, frozen,

your bare feet on buffalo  grass already icy with frost,

and you hold your breath,

not wanting to startle the creature:

alert, and white as a bowl of milk in the night,

and poised, ready to halt, look in your direction,

and spring away, barely ruffling the leaf litter

underneath…

 

like one of those fleeting things

that you know may never happen again,

but that remain in your memory,

glowing and milk-white.

 

 

 

Saturday 3 May 2014

Mapping the Island

Mapping the Island

Penny Carey-Wells and Diane Perndt curated Mapping the Island exhibition for the Ten Days on the Island Festival 2009, that is the leading biannual arts event in Tasmania, Australia.  



Selected national and international artists, including poets, chefs, wine makers, dancers, musicians, papermakers, printmakers and mixed media visual artists, received a section taken from a topographical map. They were asked to create a two-dimensional paper based response measuring 29 x 29 cm square. Over 140 extraordinary works were received - each piece telling its own story from the deeply personal, to the wonderfully witty and the aesthetically masterful.



From the original exhibition the curators selected fifty works for further touring. The tour began at the Burnie Regional Art Gallery in January 2011 after which it circumnavigated the island state. Now it is heading off for a road trip on the big island.



Look closely - enjoy the humour, find the bizarre, search for the wayward and discover the wonderful

OUR LADY OF THE SEVEN SORROWS


“It is said privately that up the country, instances occur where the Natives are ‘shot like so many crows,’ which never comes before the public.”

(Colonial Advocate & Tasmanian Review and Register 1830)

1. Pilgrimmage:

Closing the front door of Sacre Couer at six twenty-five,

my daughter and I dissect empty Sunday streets.

We are leaving on a pilgrimage to the middle of this cryptic island.

The roads are threadbare.

The sky unfolds, and at last, we can breathe.

We divide fields of white poppies,

the road a seam of hand-stitches hemming up the wild places;

the sides of the gravel pinned with the regular white tacks

that keep the small wildnesses in place.

Blackwoods and gums crowd the edges

like tattered beggars jostling for place. Hills rise up suddenly.

They are the backs of grey-green carrion,

their spines picked clean of flesh or pelt…

their backbones exposed to the scavenging seasons.

 

Voluptuous farmland, fecund and stretch-marked,

dimples up to the foot of a plateau-

it rises like twins born scalp-to-scalp,

their stubborn chins pointing east and west, defying separation.

Sheep are molasses-faced and fat.

Even shorn, they are lardy and stolid.

There are recently-ploughed acres,

the orange soil worked to a delectable tilth.

Staid towns are uncluttered and almost unpopulated streets

where old bachelors drive unpretentious utes

and raise a single finger in greeting.

 

This is a kind of pilgrimage. It is a pilgrimage to the heart of the island-

a wide and brazen chalice surrounded by a circle of rough-cut stone.

But once: an open wound, gouged out by the persistent thrust

of ice-age glaciers.  It is summer and there has been rain.

The pasture is electric and plush; cattle long-bodied and svelte.

We cross corduroy bridges tatted over rivulets and rivers.

You wonder how anyone can manage to carry on the threads of a life

so far away from everything, and are reminded that everything tends to be

wherever you decide to tie off the knot of your life.

 

2. The Sacred Heart:

I grew up with the image of the Sacred Heart

affixed to my mother’s bedroom wall

alongside Our Lady of Sorrows: both in heavy gilt frames.

He was a caucasian Christ, of course, with long, pale gentlings of hair.

He held his hands open to reveal cuneiform slits

in narrow, uncalloused palms.

Most surprising of all was the open heart exposed

to show beating muscle bound by a woven ring of penetrating thorns,

a cross skewering the flesh from above,

and a bright flare of flames encroaching from behind;

(while, alongside, Our Lady of Sorrows wept her hot tears

with seven swords stuck permanently in her guiltless heart

and a twist of something like fencing wire corseting her throbbing valves).

 

3. Badly-behaved children in a two-dollar-store:

We have set off to see the absolute heart of this island, and to return.

We are seeking something spiritual- some throat-aching sacredness-

but have no expectation of where we might end up,

except that it is a place called Jackeys Marsh.

 

Just off-centre of this wild dead-end,

a narrow road leads to some pasture where another wave of invaders,

(the photos show uncommonly large-chinned souls;

they could be the founding members of some

Appalachian Anabaptist Clogging Jamboree),

have returned to set up camp over a couple of decades.

Not so different from those original invaders,

they have come from the tail-end of an Age of Enlightenment,

and they, too, believe they know a better way of being human.

And, just like the first invaders, they barely see the people

who have made their homes in the wide and motherly expanse of the valley.

Like some tribe invented from the pages of Anthropology for Dummies,

they misappropriate the gewgaws and baubles of culture,

barging through millennia of complexity and subtlety

like badly-behaved children in a two-dollar store.

They gobble religion and mystique before they even reach the check-out,

leaving their empty wrappers behind.  But,

in the strong and beating heart of this place, they are only a murmur:

their djembes barely puncturing the deeper rhythm of long centuries.

There are photos from each festival on the ‘net, dating back to 1983.

I am no longer a wide-eyed romantic.

I can imagine the pit-toilets, the mess left behind by these

strangely detached children-of-nature.  Along Jackeys Marsh Road,

the blackberries have invaded the bush and crowd at the edge of the gravel.

We imagine the excreta of the forest-festival-goers infesting the bush,

germinating all these noxious weeds.

 

4.  Omphalus:

We pass a man and a woman leaving a cabin to clamber onto their pushbikes.

They look like they are meditating on where the hell they are.

We turn onto Sugarloaf Road.

The surface becomes rougher, the road narrower.

Eventually, we come to a portentous Private Property sign.

My daughter gets out of the car to read a sign further up.

She returns to tell me that our foray into the heart of the bush has ended

at a Buddhist Retreat. I turn the car and retreat to Meander.

 

Like the weeds by the sides of the road, another exotic invader.

At this omphalus, this navel at the centre of the valley,

a resting place for that flighty moth: introspection.

Yet there is room here, too, in this place where we throb with separation,

with the ultimate cutting of the cord that once attached us to the soil.

We pass the bike-riders again.

They seem serious and intent, wobbling on their silly bicycles

their senses of humour clearly left behind with their soy chai.

And you think, if this is truly the heart of this large island,

surely a good laugh would not be out of place.

Were the original people of this place as poe-faced as those who came after?

Surely there were times when their smoke-reddened eyes brimmed with mirth…

when their lungs heaved with amusement- the old mother’s fat old belly quaking,

her old cheeks pushing so far upwards that she could barely open her eyes.

Do we truly imagine the old-timers living lives devoid of hilarity?

Do we picture those first immigrants seeing out whole generations

without a wry chuckle?  At the heart of this island,

in the old belly in the shelter of the stony heart,

there must have been tears of laughter besides tears of despair.

There must have been the ridiculous, as well as the sublime.

 

5. Keepers of the Ochre:

There are layer on layer of history here,

like the smooth muscle layers of a human heart.

Long before the Buddhist Retreat at the end of Sugarloaf Road;

long before the forest festival and its own brand of colonialism…

even before the ordered streets, the quiet homeliness of the Meander Store,

there were the settlers and there was a people called the Pallittorre.

 

The old mother was ancient even before the Pallittorre people arrived.

Like children and grandchildren, they found the safe place in her belly,

tucked in underneath her stony heart. And they made their homes there,

little knowing the icy violence that had gouged out her motherly softness:

a monster river of ice and gravel had scooped out her insides

leaving behind the savaged wound that would become a beautiful valley.

Her many sorrows gathered like great tears pooling in the rim

of an eye…and they fell, and they fell,

feeding the gentle river until it burst its banks with maternal suffering.

The old mother, the ancient grandmother, would be pierced at her very womb,

and knowing this would happen was one of the sorrows

that penetrated her.

Over the millennia, she had given birth to trees,

to birds and to beasts, and to the people who, like all people,

and unlike the other creatures, had given a name to themselves.

 

The Pallittorre people belonged to that old mother, and,

because they were her people,

she gave them access to her ochre mines…her mother lode.

The ochre was the thick, sweet after-milk of the old woman’s flesh.

The Pallittorre people grew fat and important on the oily milk,

the chrysm, of their old mother’s teats.

 

6.  The newcomers:

When the newcomers came, pushing inwards into the old woman’s innards,

the old and faltering womb was pierced again and again.

When the sleeping Pallittorre people were shot with nails around their campfires,

the old mother wept her hot tears…Such great and unstoppable tears!

When the women were raped and mutilated

in reprisal for the theft of a couple of lice-ridden sheep,

the old mother wept tears of blood;

and when the children were stolen away from the dolerite and quartzite

from which they were made, there were no tears good enough,

except those terrible and timeless tears of stone.

Still, those exiled peasants who came to hack the trees

and burn the stumps and breed their sheep

were more akin to the Pallitorre people than the head-shaking Government Man

in his paper steeple of bureaucracy.

 

Those peasants understood the pull of the motherly valley;

they knew the threat of a long winter and slow hunger and probable death-

they, too, knew what it was to have a wife and children slaughtered…

they knew the fear of inexplicable Otherness,

and in that way, were not so far removed from the people they displaced.

It was the clean-handed and detached official in his fortress of detachment

that was most despicable…who came from an era of Enlightenment

and truly believed he knew a better way of being human.

 

The Pallittorre people perhaps saw themselves as a Scaled-fish people;

they saw themselves in the river blackfish that swam its meandering path;

they knew their brothers and sisters in the divergent gaze of the tiny galaxia.

And, being a high-born people, keepers of the sacred,

the Pallittorre people would never stoop to consume a scaled fish-

just as those later foreign people would be repulsed

by the greedy consumption of dog or dolphin.

For it is not the creature that a people reviles, that is taboo;

it is the creature  that is most cherished in the souls of the people

as brother or guardian.

Nor did the people sew their kangaroo or possum skins to make clothing,

but wore it as it came off the beast: whole and animal-shaped;

and in this way, they showed their great respect.

 

7. An echidna by the side of the road:

Heading home toward the Lakes, we are followed by a series of convertibles,

multi-coloured and polished with impatience.

Their united bravado irritates us in this primal landscape of rock and water.

I take each bend carefully and the convertibles swing behind

like a colourful tail on a kite.

Finally, sealed road gives way to gravel.  I pull over to let the cars pass.

They slow down to park before the bitumen ends.

The last car in the convoy passes us and we read its number plate:

ZEN.  Laughing heartily,

we leave it behind and contemplate white rock

strewn across this god-sized world.

An echidna waddles at the edge of the gravel.

 

And, so, if that wide and comforting valley is the mother, crying tears of blood,

then the embracing ridge-tops are the son, young yet, and arrogant.

Scourged and weatherbeaten, the ravaged ridge-tops

tower over the pliant green valley.

Columns of dolerite and quartzite flaunt their naked perpendicularity.

The open stigmata of clearfelling punctures distant hilltops,

the acres yet unburnt cross-hatched with a cruel mockery.

Where, once, the settlers cornered the original people

there is an unending line of power-poles silhouetted against the great emptiness,

like an unending row of crucifixes waiting to be adorned

by an endless supply of messiahs.

 

 


 

 

An Inhospitable Place


A mosquito net the blue of a birds’ egg;

I remember those torn paper eggs abandoned in the grass-

sometimes,  a tiny bird corpse was folded inside,

and the dead stink would be uniquely birdlike.

 

My mother was obsessed with the three babies she lost,

and it’s possible that I always imagined them

as goggle-eyed fledglings,

their undeveloped wings like fleshy little fans, folded.

 

It was an inhospitable place for young of any kind:

 

the kittens that Dad stole from the ginger cat-

(we simply called her “The Mother Cat”)-

mewing under the dirt and buffalo grass

where he buried them alive.

 

The only pets we ever had were the whining strays

with gummy eyes, that climbed the back screen door

after tea, and wound around and around our legs,

pressing their flanks, on our way out the back.

 

I hated them.

They were too needy, and they crept

through the hole in the back wall of the dunny

when you sat there in the dark.

 

Once, a ferret escaped into our yard

from the Polish man nextdoor;

another  time, a duck.

 

There were no normal pets for us:

no ball-catching dogs, or fat and snoozy cats.

It was an inhospitable place for the young

of any species.

 

The only reason we survived

in our mother’s womb was because

we were held in there with injections

and a Fry’s Cream Bar every Wednesday.

 

 

Our grip on life was tenuous back then,

but it made for tough and strange little souls

with a tenacious grip on staying alive.