Monday, September 25, 2017

James Walton #74 Contracted out mail




A ute hangs five
off Sweeny’s bend
in mechanical contradiction

the flooded open palm
of river anticipates
patient as the Boatman

while Cliff’s toupee
by a once in a hundred years gale
arrives back in town

an unexpected delivery
of tumbled matting hirsuteness
now a dislodged umlaut

chased by dogs
pecked by maggies
claw flicked by cats

rests finally in the mud
at the RSL car park
stamped down the middle

not on the side




6 comments:

  1. A terrific poem, James. (Don't know exactly why, but I suddenly thought of these 2 old things.)

    OFF THE OLD COAST ROAD

    By the other hand off the old coast road
    there’s a bend takes you back to the ocean
    and a fence which I don’t think you’ll see
    until you stop time enough to look past it.
    Full marks if you’ve got the prescience,
    but don’t get off this road till you’re ready.
    The fever that was all you ever wanted
    is two close lanes before and beyond. Two.
    Wonder if you’ll ever get past your nerve.
    Please don’t fool around with the edges of this,
    grandstanding like a celestial idiot. Swerve
    your hands off the wheel for only a second,
    your God will change you. Nothing’s kidding.
    The car you’re driving belongs to someone else.
    Some guy just called his brother about an accident.

    THE SEA

    Sitting out the front in the bush
    in a dry place distant from the sea
    an almost ferro-concrete boat stared
    at country cars for twenty years
    chicken wire in an everything yard
    conjuring up wet hull and spray
    and the busy doubting Mallee
    never did see finished the careful work
    never heard more than talk of fishing
    of station frame or final cementing
    then the house was boarded up forever
    maybe everywhere was unkind weather
    it would never rain fishes there
    the sun burned the imagination
    salt water was eventually drinkable
    the wind sprang up when the grog ran out
    dreams moored against certain horrors
    a fishing life where one man had none.


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    Replies
    1. Glad you did - both fantastic. Life is weird, in the best way, I wrote one about the coast road and things round here, about a week ago!

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    2. Very strange, James. Often wonderful. To us I reckon is the challenge just to look for it.

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    3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. A fine poem indeed James - and what a nice finish in mud at the RSL carpark.

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