in a warm Indian accent
passing
through the Canberra Centre,
the
melting narwhal tusk lingers,
doing
a lightspeed samba at the end of night
in
a bubbling mandolin wind
and
a beautiful pea-green boat
as
time and Diogenes needle me
into
esemplastic bags,
launching
a stale trifle into a green wave,
lobbing
a storm halfway across the ocean
(truly
tennis without the net),
forking
memories of
daggeurotype
panoramas of Paris and London
with
osprey pie and heated quarrels
between
Marx and Engels,
over
Hannah Arendt’s On Revolution
and
the polar co-ordinates of Euler,
onto
my name-dropping melamine plate;
spavined
nightmares like this are easily-grown as a fig-tree
in
the heaving suburbs,
or
shreds of guttering children,
or
songs of queasy weavers weeping
by
the spokeshaven, nebulised chimneys of dawn
(I’m
with you in Rockland):
yes
the couch is warm and comfortable,
I’m
sure Francis Bacon would have loved it
after
his experience with the frozen chicken —
now,
tossing off the filth of centuries,
let
me rise and greet the miserable day,
flooded
with the horse-brown light of the nineteenth century,
aping
the apocalypse,
let
me draw out Leviathan with an hook,
fret
again with a flagon of tokay about
ageing
and dying and failing in sepia,
normal
things, not the filigreed iron feelings
of
reel-to-reel cities recycling their poor
and
peddling only their neap peak experiences;
dear
angelic doctor, I glare
like
a bicycle ganglion on the summer,
dishwasher-safe
on a blasted heath,
obtruding
from owlish oblong American obbligati,
Wollt
ihr den totalen Krieg?,
knocking
my knees and nostrums over the Brindabellas,
burbling
icily about a glimmer of retrogravity,
checking
in with semantically-bleached surfies
and
rainbow cake to a ground glass hotel
(what
mean ye that ye beat my people into packet mix?),
imperial
stink-bombs, Mantovani and his kaleidoscopic You-Tube
xylophones
notwithstanding.
in a bubbling mandolin wind
ReplyDeletethe filigreed iron feelings
of reel-to-reel cities recycling their poor
or shreds of guttering children
knocking my knees and nostrums over the Brindabellas
... and so on and so on and so on – lots to thrill to, even within such confronting subject matter.
(Btw could you drop your text into TextEdit and put a bit more space between the lines, for easier reading by septuagenarians? Not impossible as it is now, but a bit crowded.)
Pleased you like it Rosemary — have modified the font size.
Deleteamazing! laughed myself silly with a few of those images, not that I mean to laugh at your wisdom ;)
ReplyDeleteSo good! xm
ReplyDeleteThanks Rosemary, Efi, Mikaela. Had no idea when I started that it was going to turn into this. :)
ReplyDelete