198
found
draft
in
the notes for my Japanese translator, Hiroko Izumi
I
imagine a scrap of writing turns into a leaf from a tree
the
wind is what conceals the change
it
is the agent of change as well
the
wind is the change
and
the leaf
and
what's written
passes
here means
can
be taken for
as
in knowing what's what
a
demonstration of gratitude
on
old television sets – when the image wouldn't settle
but
kept turning over and over, vertically
like
closing curtains
as
if the beggars were part of the wall, came out of the wall,
just
a hand out of the wall, as if the wall were begging
the
glass is stuck in one's head after having a drink –- but it's not
my head, it's someone else's
it's
as if my father (dead thirteen years now) were in some institution
(hospital, army, school)
–
and I wonder what the food is like there
and
there isn't any
in
other words, will the light be found?
the
future is full of stars that have died, as for instance, ours
one
cannot tell whether the joy is of the words or of the world or both
home
is home!
love
rests on a gate …
as
it swings
or
leaning on the gate to have a rest …
what's
beyond the top of the hill or in the next valley
low
noise of something hitting something else
in
this case probably the wallaby's tail
footfall
is the sound of the foot touching the ground
I've
taken that apart
while
I make a note on paper
there
was a frog in the letterbox years ago
there
is still a frog in the letterbox
I
imagine that it is the same frog
it
looks the same
though
this is unlikely given what is known of the lifespan of frogs
the
little dreaming patch is the place in the country where we live
striving
– in a rough kind of way
and
having the advantage of a good sleep
simply
– what the singing tells is the most meaningful thing
the
meaning comes to us without any words
but
it does have feathers and fine bones
you
know there's a surface because something is scratched on it
places
in the garden where there is nothing that needs to be done
in
the Wizard of Oz the scarecrow sli ps of the nail
that was holding him onto a post
in
order to go on his adventures with Dorothy
a
flokati is a big woolly rug of Greek origin
a
machete could be something like a ukulele, but it's NOT, it's a
bladed tool for cutting grass or weeds or jungle... very useful in
the garden but no one wants you to get on a plane with one these days
it's
addressed to the ancient Egyptian sungod
the
Koolonock is the low range of hills across the Myall River
on
the other side of the valley from where my place is
I
should salute this particular sun, as if each sun seen were a
different one, a new one
the
sun is new every day
in
order to salute you need to use a part of your body – for instance
your arm
it's
the bright sunshine that makes my shadow
at
this point in the poem we don't know what the it is
but
it turns out to be the rain
the
sound of the rain on the roof is like a kind of speech
when
the sky is in the right mood
it's
as if the mist around them were an aura created by the process of
observing
as
if the mist were not really here
but
were spoken from somewhere else
the
way a ventriloquist throws his/her voice
to
make it appear that someone else is speaking
the
mist is like a hat for the whole world
-
it covers everything
blurs
every line but if you look hard maybe you can still find the lines
you
can't see where the sun is
but
the sun is drawing the lines
the
image is of things flowing and floating
birds
over the land and the sound of cattle
I
am trying to suggest these animals
without
saying their names
throated
else means making another call
seasons
well up - like water overflowing
-
the season is too full
stars
cannot speak, cannot tell their story
the
smallest things in life – e.g. insects, worms – have their own
tunes …
you can imagine these written down as music
the
words are like smoke – you can't catch them
each
time I paint a paintin g
wherever
I cut the grass or the weeds – with scythe
it's
as if I were making crop circles by myself
I
have made a noun into a verb here
to
say what palms do
they
put out fronds – so why not
palms
frond (?)
what
belongs in love or any clinch
you
never know which way a tune will go – it's like a track
you're
walking for the first time
the
best thing is not to trim it
but
let everything grow
and
grow in
like
a garden gone wild
so
that you're somehow trapped in it
but
in a good way
I
make food
I
share it
I
make friends
the
question is who is the we?
the
noun wings and the verb burrow
suggest
maybe birds and maybe a mammal like a wombat or a rabbit
the
point is that our species has all of these kinds of history – and
so affinity
all
of the hours that make up the future
i.e.
all of the time that there is from now on
we
know (or astronomers know)
which
star a star is
by
knowing the way it will go

Love it! Really fascinating insights and observations.
ReplyDeletea machete could be something like a ukelele! Oh course!
ReplyDeleteso pleasurable!
ReplyDelete