your family has a frailty
about it that endears
it to all the girls who've thrown
their heads under the celestial
doona cover when your mother sobs
or your brother's anger rears up
like a cornered Huntsman -
the comparisons your father makes
between he and a young Sylvester Stallone
puts smiles on faces that subcultures coat
with taciturn dust - waxy apple skin
legs stuck to your thigh by sweat
at the knee pit start to pulse to the rhythm
of your mother's songs about your overweight
cat, Bee-Gees songs with 'Petey Petey Petey'
in lieu of the regular lyrics -
perfect dysfunction would, at least, have made
Borges bow his stately head for periodic
infinity - for you though, you for whom the pinwheels
of chance spun hardest between May 1988
and February 1989, they are simply your family,
they are of you - and when a multitude of souls
embodies a single being it is nothing
if not deified - you are a God and I worship accordingly.
...
she is crying fitfully, a baby who has yet to learn
how to cry and breathe conterminously
but old enough to suffer incurable anxiety - why can't
those maladies be resolved in reverse order?
why can't babies, as from the tit,
be weaned from their manic depression and social phobias,
and the fear that life is lived
always on the cusp of tragedy?
then Lyotard wouldn't ache to be a child again -
to know how to celebrate is to have
mastered mourning, and in the faces and objects
and areas which monster us with their beauty
there also dwells the monstrous -
but look at her, Panda-eyed,
tears blotting each eyelash
like the bulb of the root in each pore, weeping
over nothing when everywhere
there are causes for joy!
I watch her and, as never before,
think that we are designed to suffer,
that the Epicurean opposites are
chemical inducements, that our inscrutable
purpose is really none too clear -
only problem is, if suffering is inborn,
why aren't there more babies on Prosac?
...
the fervour some need to write
is closer to a frezy - but Fyodor
Dostoyevski is more buck wild than the girl
I like who blusters her notepad around
the room, as though to consecrate
the emotional eddies on the page,
whose scornful hisses ward
off my feeble attempts to speak to her -
I am dating a prettier,
less talented, female Underground Man.
...
everything I have ever wanted to express
already resides in two places:
the Library of Babel and a book
called In Search of Lost Time -
subsequently my will to express it
has been nullified, effaced by the urge
to read it in a totality that I
would probably never have realised -
what effect does that have on my worth
as an artist?
well, the Library's books never were furnished
with authors, but if we hold to the logic it seems
that they too should be infinite in number
and variance -
therefore, not only have I written all
that I'll ever write already,
I also wrote In Search of Lost Time
and every other book there was, or will be.
so did you.
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Saturday, 9 June 2012
beginning of another story about spiders
It’s just that I
already feel like I need to start making sense of the decisions I made, put
them into a logical sequence instead of the impulses, pell mell and violent as
orgasms, they were when I made them. Because in all my short life I’ve never
felt regret like this. I’ve never tried to breathe but couldn’t, because of how
sick I feel at the idea of sustaining my own life. I’ve never heard the voice
of the storyteller in my head speaking in so many discordant accents, tones,
volumes. I’m half-cracked and I know I am and it’s all because last month I set
a spider on fire.
A Huntsman. It was
bigger than average, the size you can make into a monster with an outstretched
hand and not feel like a liar. It scuttled across my bed. I was reading A Discovery of Strangers at the time and a John
Serrie album, one of his exquisite collaborations with Gary Stroudos, was
murmuring in the background. I liked to listen to Serrie while I read; the
sparseness of his arrangements seemed incommensurate with the speed at which I absorbed
each page and had the subsequent effect of both slowing down and supercharging
time, as if I were surfing a great wave as well as watching it from the beach,
building miles and miles offshore. My white blinds were drawn, but backlit
brightly enough to know it was still the afternoon. Now and then I could hear
Kiera, my housemate, and her boyfriend Daniel making food, which usually made
me hungry and lonely because Daniel was a chef and I was in love with Kiera but
the window of opportunity had been steamed over by our living arrangements and
the fact that she didn’t love me back. Something interesting is that our house
was a double-storey but the kitchen was the only room upstairs.
The sight of the spider almost gave me a
heart attack. In that moment I was suddenly reminded of the time when I was a
kid that I had gone for a swim and taken a bunched up towel off our table
tennis table to dry myself and then felt something in my hair, felt the tickle
of it coming down my front, saw it on my chest in the reflection of the
backdoor, woke in the night at the slightest odd sensation for weeks
afterwards. It was a memory I had forgotten and at the shock of it I sprang up.
I managed eventually to track the spider to behind the bed-head, which I had covered
in cutout pages of Hesse’s Siddhartha.
The spider was sitting as motionless as if it had never moved in its life. Its
legs were curled up, like those of a dead crab. Its body – or sac, or whatever
you call it – looked like a bulb of nutmeg and the thought of putting it in a nutcracker
made me grit my teeth. As calmly as possible I pulled the rest of the bed away
from the bed-head, revealing a sliver of dusty floorboards, a pen and a couple
of odd socks. Now the spider had nowhere to go.
One of the dusty
socks was thick, an Explorer I think they call them, and I put it over my hand
like a puppet of death. The dust made me want to cough but I held it down. My
dad had always used a jam jar and a paper towel to trap spiders, or cockroaches
for that matter, putting them out in the yard or, to make my sister and I laugh,
over our neighbour’s fence, but I was panicked didn’t have any empty jars or
paper towels. All I had – or thought I had – was a sock. For a split second
though I took my eyes off the spider and looked around, maybe to see if anyone
was watching. It was then that I noticed the cigarette lighter on my
windowsill, sitting in the bonsai pot. I used it to light candles for my incense burner. There was
also a can of shoe waterproofer I had happened to be using that morning in
preparation for the trip I was making to Mount Bogong.
Wednesday, 6 June 2012
loaded smells: mulch
garden mulch is a smell on
which I drank myself
into adulthood –
and when I’m old and the
only ellipsis left
is that of the great perhaps it
will blow towards me in
a squall of memory, the scent
of the saturday trips
to the warrandyte nursery,
the fig tarts we ate there,
the christmas trees we
had chopped down and loaded,
the mulch hillocks
I could have ran up and down forever –
whole decades will have vanished
by then – fettered as I am by this
nembutal imperative – fettered
but fearless – I can watch
the umbrella of a water fountain crown
and land like the sound of babies
treading water, float tranquilly down to
the cavernous pits of my remembrance –
I can like it there. So when the dump truck
bucks a mulch mound into the centre
of royal park, I imbibe it as if I’m about
to be submerged, knowing
I’ve a few more gulps of that woody elixir
left before my long hair turns white.
Thursday, 10 May 2012
Cameron's first release
I visit the leisure centre, three days
after discharge, to discharge from my body
a drugged abiding stillness, a dormancy I
can’t shake. Not even the roar of a stoked lawn mower, the hum of a fridge at
nighttime shakes it. Not even freedom. Yes the typeset of my house keys the
real back into me, but not my body’s proper
proclivities or the crowded fuselage of
mental orbit, not the energy I need to be alive.
And here the little legion of selves
scattered in the playpen do what no dumbbell can- the kids’ finger-paintings look
like masterpieces to me, they’re the seminal artworks of a memory begun afresh;
jar of buttons a treasure trove to a boy with long white hair, chided for
nearly leveling a girl jumping up and down for joy
on a sheet of egg foam. And balloon bundles
like massive genomes sit on shrunken seats the colour of polished bone, the
colour of the ward’s walls.
Wireless modem flashing purple sends the
women, drunk on lavender, into tickling paroxysms; they careen down backs and
up hairless legs, and all
the flags of the world are blown out of
their borders by crayon. I wake.
Long to be tickled. Those slight undulations
on the grassy path from the train station, detectable only in the ache proprioception
sent to my calves, the laughter I feel gestating now as the white-haired boy
laughs: are they not the root of my impunity, why everyone is so alarmed? Even
when I hurt myself I only watch as I am hurt. I am not an agent unto myself but
an agent of the universe; my actions no less causal than gravity’s grounding me.
I slake its sadistic thirsts.
That is and always has been my typeset.
Sunday, 8 April 2012
some unedited writings from confest
sometimes the boughs of the biggest oak
overhanging the turbid water
of the river behind my school seem
suddenly weakened, no longer capable
of supporting me;
cruel noiseless impotence
of those highest raking canopies
- something like the alphabet scratched
by rosella claws, and nicknames scrawled
on branches strong enough yesterday
to cradle Vinteuil's piano and sonata books
and fool's gold leaves -
too weak even to contemplate
scaling them now, my hands in any case
too weak to suffer the splitting bark,
the sharp nodules of unformed limbs;
and hanging slackly halfway up,
eyeing the artichoke farm, eyes stuck
on the light-towered cusp of the ridge
before the thorny scrub and the sea
I can go no further;
on those days I peer through the green ceiling,
goosefleshed by the afternoon cool,
and bereft of the body
I'd have needed to climb,
become only a pair of eyes
watching the windswept clouds move.
...
thundercloud walker, fleet-footed
on the path of the furore
of the sky;
like salt poured
ceremoniously over snow,
the chalky residue of dried
raindrops does nothing
to disguise the reticent steps, or
sheet lightning
the pale flash of ardour in your eyes;
dilated world, yawning world,
world a crusty clam shell prised
open, world pearl-less - you
moving, moved by the dimmest
memories of rainstorms in your mind -
why, in those imaginings,
is it always dark matter
being bestrode?
Do you ever dream of the sun?
Or is it that joyous signifiers
need no conquering, only
to be stood beneath;
is it that only the foolhardy try
to over-top light?
...
slanting like sunlight through the mangrove trees
a scission; no;
a collage, an interweaving of seagulls
swooping to feed and storm cloud-
-filtered moonbeams;
spotlighted, every moment transcends
its own momentariness,
every flap of wings
a diaphanous flash - and silver water
roused to coy shimmers
alive and yet still pristine;
even when hundreds of submarine
beaks latch onto death
a huge hidden halo appears,
fixes those last writhes in my mind
and anchors them in eternity;
the night cannot blacken souls -
the moon's birds indivisible
from the moon, that matchless white -
the birds who live closer to heaven
than us, backlit spears thrown from oblivion
as a sleeper's mind throws dreams
overhanging the turbid water
of the river behind my school seem
suddenly weakened, no longer capable
of supporting me;
cruel noiseless impotence
of those highest raking canopies
- something like the alphabet scratched
by rosella claws, and nicknames scrawled
on branches strong enough yesterday
to cradle Vinteuil's piano and sonata books
and fool's gold leaves -
too weak even to contemplate
scaling them now, my hands in any case
too weak to suffer the splitting bark,
the sharp nodules of unformed limbs;
and hanging slackly halfway up,
eyeing the artichoke farm, eyes stuck
on the light-towered cusp of the ridge
before the thorny scrub and the sea
I can go no further;
on those days I peer through the green ceiling,
goosefleshed by the afternoon cool,
and bereft of the body
I'd have needed to climb,
become only a pair of eyes
watching the windswept clouds move.
...
thundercloud walker, fleet-footed
on the path of the furore
of the sky;
like salt poured
ceremoniously over snow,
the chalky residue of dried
raindrops does nothing
to disguise the reticent steps, or
sheet lightning
the pale flash of ardour in your eyes;
dilated world, yawning world,
world a crusty clam shell prised
open, world pearl-less - you
moving, moved by the dimmest
memories of rainstorms in your mind -
why, in those imaginings,
is it always dark matter
being bestrode?
Do you ever dream of the sun?
Or is it that joyous signifiers
need no conquering, only
to be stood beneath;
is it that only the foolhardy try
to over-top light?
...
slanting like sunlight through the mangrove trees
a scission; no;
a collage, an interweaving of seagulls
swooping to feed and storm cloud-
-filtered moonbeams;
spotlighted, every moment transcends
its own momentariness,
every flap of wings
a diaphanous flash - and silver water
roused to coy shimmers
alive and yet still pristine;
even when hundreds of submarine
beaks latch onto death
a huge hidden halo appears,
fixes those last writhes in my mind
and anchors them in eternity;
the night cannot blacken souls -
the moon's birds indivisible
from the moon, that matchless white -
the birds who live closer to heaven
than us, backlit spears thrown from oblivion
as a sleeper's mind throws dreams
Sunday, 25 March 2012
Courtship
courtship
star-shaped pail of sand poured on rippling puddles
and underwater, mound upon mound
of akoya pearls and palm-reader
wedding lines etched upon my hands
the daybreak the dusk
copper condors in gilded frames
your bedroom walls
your bed
so low to the dusty floor
the upswept eddying
maple leaves
incense oil whorls
birthday party smoke of nightlong burnings
stuffed giraffes and lions arranged in a bassinet
for love one-eyed and earless
my love one-eyed and earless
the flowers the flower-stems
a thousand bees and you
in a sunflower meadow
on the path we trace
downtrodden leaves
are lined like your too-old hands
Friday, 16 March 2012
she, in winter
she, in winter
Suddenly a truck horn blows towards my ears on the wind, wavers, vanishes, blows back. I feel the fine hairs on my ear lobes, now cold but afire, react to the noise, writhe, make themselves known to me. Declaim their presence. But why?
The horn. Instinctively I brace for the crash of an accident, shrug my shoulders and grit my teeth, but when the crash doesn’t come I lower my left shoulder and look back over it. Then I spin right around. A giant snowplough, the first I’ve seen in my life, has mounted the curb near the corner of Haldimand and Mont Carmal. Huge tires scudding along the icy footpath, snow everywhere. People screaming.
It’s headed straight for an old man I know. We waved to one another just minutes ago in fact, even said bonjour in passing. Before that he was a stranger like any other in this strange fairy tale city, weird logos on their coats, incomprehensible words issuing from their scarf-covered mouths, looking straight or down instead of everywhere, at nothing instead of everything, but now he is a friend and the shovel I watched him use to clear dirty shop entrance snow is limp at his side. He’s going to get hit, I know it.
So in shock I cup my hand over my mouth. Scarves don’t sell where I come from and my gloves, kangaroo leather, are nothing but conduits for whatever temperature it happens to have fallen or risen to; they’re colder than my skin. Gulping in too much air, I splutter. The frost makes it caustic and my throat tastes of iron. Then, as if by some miracle, the snowplough’s enormous yellow bulk comes to a halt at the last possible moment. Truly the bulbar is close enough to smell. My friend the old man grabs snow from the ground with gloveless hands and pelts it at the passenger side window, iced down to the small nautical roundness they call hublot, and gesticulates madly. The door opens. A huge man in an ear-flapped Peruvian tuque gets out and I consider bolting over to intervene. But the old man takes off his jacket, which is a brand I now know as Canada Goose, laughs, gives the other a hug, climbs aboard. Meantime she’s now some distance up the hill, almost undetectable in the whiteness.
As I quicken my steps to catch her, I think about winter. What is it to me? It’s cold but too hot for snow. Darkness falls earlier than summer but not in the middle of the afternoon like here. It anticipates spring but only in the way that grayish shallow seawater anticipates the deep blue of the open ocean, whereas in these parts it could be the moon turning from white to green and spawning saplings and sunflowers in its bare craters. This dead of winter which makes people indoors claustrophobic and dry-lipped and people outdoors, under their huge coats and balaclavas, anguished with cold, will gradually recede and reveal the new spring, nothing less than a benediction. But at home it’s nothing; the smell of lawn clippings maybe, more rain. Nothing. And the leaves? Suddenly I’m not thinking anymore and it is like returning from the distance. Those high-spirited idiots and their snowplough are pictorially with me. At first their afterimage makes me chuckle.
But then as the incident loses its immediacy I notice another feeling welling inside me, shock, and through shock and the exertion of trying to catch her up my blood seems sprung to life but my body numbed. I can wriggle my toes again but barely move my legs. Hear the thud of a rising heartbeat over car tires quieted by fresh powder. Falling more heavily now the snow veils buildings, sends snot gushing from my nose to freeze solid on my moustache, salty icicles goading my tongue, lick them off lick them off, when I know that if I do they’ll come back twice as bad. Proof I am rising; the old port, the bus terminal next door, the maple markets (I bought some apple butter for my mum there), the walls of the Old City, all slowly coming into view. Misted sweeping outskirts all low-income apartments and plumes of steam and shopping malls. She is from the poor side of town with three malls one after another and I don’t know how many Tim Horton’s. The malls are exact replicas but closer to different sets of commission houses.
Now like a horn like a postcard like a dream I can see the Saint Laurent, hear – but only figuratively – the tumbling Chute Montmorency, feel myself swept over formless nameless edges. It’s frozen in parts and the scores of tributaries running into it, when seen from this height, look almost like legs squiggling from the belly of a great spider. I am keeping sentry over the most powerful river in a nation where water is as plentiful iron-ore is back home. Me, I am doing that. Next to it the Murray is a murky leak. The sheets of ice floating downstream are wider than the Yarra, firs on its banks colossal white arrows. Though veiled in fog at each end I know that, not far from where I stand, the river forms one of the largest estuaries in the world. And this hugeness, this oceanic sense of scale I don’t limit to the river itself but gift also to the land it borders, land which, if viewed in isolation, would be of no interest and devoid of heart. Or so it seems to me right now. Later, when the Saint Laurent has become the plain old Saint Lawrence again, I’ll think differently. Stopping on the narrow sidewalk to let a woman pass, I cop the brunt of the wind and gaze riverward and think of the Inuit and the Mohawk and the Arctic Northern Provinces and she says merci and, having to think a second, I answer c’est rien back. She’s talking on the phone. Moins vingt-sept is all I understand.
Then the black ridges of Chateau Frontenac are in view. Behind them the sun’s orb looks paler than normal, sheathed in snow-cloud, and I imagine the sky as an egg laid by a starving hen. As the rest takes shape in front of me I’m forced to seek shelter in the gift shop of the old funicular, fingers frostbitten beneath my frigid gloves, with such pressure at their tips that they feel ready to explode. After a few minutes I’m warmer and an urge to piss rouses me and pushes the river from my mind. As if seizing the opportunity, she enters. I press back out into the open and strain my eyes both ways. There’s no sign of her anywhere.
Surprise parties only work if the person you’re celebrating shows up to the right place at the right time. Usually that means compromising the surprise; I wish that were the case now but it isn’t. She wanted to show me something but now I’m neither sure of what that something is nor certain she even said so at all, only that the words je voudrai and quelque chose, repeated now in my mind by the gruff lead actor of a terrorist film we watched together last night, issued from her mouth this morning. To what end? I forget or never knew. The urgency of her walk meant more than her words.
And so I’ve been plunged into one dark and teeter on the threshold of another; from the looks of it I’d say, at best, that there’s an hour and a half of daylight left before sundown. After that any glare refracted off the icy streets will do no more than impart a dim cruel clarity to my helplessness. No money, no SIM. I shake the snow from my shoulders and move on. Dirty slush bores its way through the unstuck toes of my boots and anaesthetizes my feet and my boot-heels make roguish slides from under me. With nobody on the street – nobody stupid enough – the world’s edges feel closer, closing. Silence more like a willful suppression of sound. And, when the whistle of the wind seems suddenly to embody all nature gagged and in pain, it describes to me the turmoil just born from my thoughts and interpretations. I’m panicked. Something even worse happens too: the landscape around me turns from white to grey, ethereal to menacing. Wonder isn’t wonder anymore, wonder is fear and, out of breath but colder than ever, I let the river morph from majestic into an abyss of nightmares.
Elk, inimitable sculptures on their heads, cantering down an empty footpath at night, lakes making mountains, mountains making lakes, rubbish bin raccoons, sulfur pits stained the colours of the center of the earth, the smell of fresh poutine. They’re not idyllic enough thoughts to level me out as my body, coincidentally, reaches the top of a final flight of stairs. The antlers are skeletal and the lakes are freezing and the raccoons stink and the pits stink and the poutine stinks. The plain I come to is vast and deserted. Also it’s littered with corpses.
Fully hundreds of figures stand, featureless and half-collapsed, their faces blown from their heads and scattered on the snow before them. A fortunate few have held onto their eyes, others their mouths or pipes, and one of the completely faceless majority still wears a black bowler hat. But not one nose has stayed on.
Because they’re arranged in precise columns, if I look through their rows at an angle the carrots appear to be markers for a kind of emergency runway, a last resort for planes run aground in the tempest. Then I notice that in front of and behind each column there are magnificent ice sculptures depicting not Elk but Moose, Indian braves too. And on its perch the chateau, with humungous icicles hanging from every awning, provincial and national flags flying from its two highest spires, channels the grandest European palaces and the castle at Disneyland. Not knowing whether to be impressed or terrified, I’d bet my life on this being the quelque chose I think she mentioned this morning. But I move as if I’m dreaming. To hit hard snow I track old footsteps in zigzags and circles on trails that seem to lead nowhere. I don’t see her or anyone else. No figures, no voices. Only wind.
After circling the plateau twice and finding nothing but empty ice-clad benches I decide to take shelter in the chateau. Misreading the sign I push instead of pull, tumble in like the physical comics so lauded in this part of the world. Nearby a revolving door turns towards and away from me mockingly; I turn away from it and move through the lobby. Dome-shaped, walls and ceiling crisscrossed with dark brown logs, it’s obviously modeled on a beaver den. A bluestone chimney rises from the center of the room, fires blazing on each of its four sides, medieval lanterns fastened in pairs all the way to the ceiling. There are mahogany leather armchairs and lamps made from gnarled pieces of driftwood. There are stuffed beavers and the heads of brown bears. Flags with strange coats of arms on them overhang the entrances to a series of tunnel-like corridors that must lead to the rooms. Two men in suits are playing chess. Tentatively I make to sit down but for reasons I can’t explain stay upright and walk over to the revolving door, which I let admit me on its third spin. And I’m outside again.
She’s at the other end of the plateau, silhouetted by mist, a shadow flailing her arms and a voice betrayed by the wind. I can hear the final cadences of her cries, shrill but soft as whispers. She’s beckoning me towards her. Relieved as I am, it’s a sight that summons all the exhaustion kept at bay by the incompleteness of the search, by the adrenaline of my panic, by the cold now temporarily quelled by the chateau’s four fires. I could collapse right here, I think, become one of the corpses. Were my eyes charcoal rocks I could pop them out and write with them in the snow and have her write in reply, I could place my nose in line with the rest of them, dig down to a treasure-filled grotto…she’s pointing at quelque chose. What is she pointing at? The sculptures? No, beyond them. The corpses? Beyond them. She’s pointing at the river.
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