Poetry International Poetry International
Gedicht

Laurie Duggan

September Song

September Song

September Song

             Bill Doggett and Earl Bostic: Trading Licks
                                                                    a great compilation
always reminds me of Ken
                                             probably still at work

             in Adelaide, though thinking by now
                                                         of coffee and writing

                                  at Baci’s (or the Flash),
Hindley Street.
                                  Here it’s hot

                                                     unseasonable September
                leaves of brown
                                                              come tumbling down

           Friday evening of the poetry fest

                                                            I’ll stay home
                watch the light dim over Bulimba
                                                                   cook mushrooms
                                     a la Grecque

                                           (bougainvillea a mass of crimson
on the balcony, the door
                                           waving in the wind though held
   by an elastic fastener).

                          The versifiers will be hot . . .

              I mean hot, not
                                          ‘hot’
                                                   (a seven part performance
of the deadly sins sounds
                                            deadly)
                                                                         but it will be great

to hear what the poets in Sydney (and Melbourne) are doing
                                                                                    these days.

                                                                         Bostic’s ‘Flamingo’:
             that great blast, rescues a tune
                                                         from ‘lightness’

                                                     (Coltrane would take this on)
                                  half-a-century old
                    like me
                                            the 1950s
                                                             a now unimaginable world
          of bright lights, electricity
                                           coloured drinks
                  “we don’t need alcohol
                                                              we just like it”.

        Whatever you say, Frank.

                                                               Are Pam and Jane
                                    wandering Rome
                                              or escaped to a cool villa elsewhere?
Is Pam writing

                 a view across Trastevere to the Tiber

                                                 positioned at a desk in the apartment
                    as Ken
                           sets up in the Baci with coffee, cake,
                                                                                The Guardian,
                                               me
                                                          on my back on the sofa
                           my preferred writing method

. . . from which I watch aircraft
                                       descend over Hamilton,

    my friends in their various places
                                                            in the fading twilight

              like a line from The Star Spangled Banner
                                                                                    a couch
                        Kerouac was too patriotic to sit on.

                                           *

                                 I cook dinner to
                                                               Danny Gatton, 88
                                        Elmira Street,
                                                                      the moon, yellow
                                               gibbous
                                                     over Morningside,
               thinking 50s hits
                                               a teenager imagining
                                 being there
                                                    (on the moon)
                                                                                    away
                                               from all this
                                                                  the cream-puff face
                             of George Méliès satellite
                                                                        (Satellite of love?)

                Danny G an heir to this philosophy
                                                                               (he
                                         hanged himself in the garage,

                                                                      though his music now
                                 seems benign enough

especially the theme to The Simpsons
                                         or, heartbreak, a version of
                                  ‘In my room’.

                                       *

                                       A day later:
I’m sitting on the floor
                                               (not lying down)
           at the Judith Wright Centre
                                                        – the poetry
           and Frank Sinatra
                                     continue –
                                                                     Jill Jones
                             not liking the heat,
                                                  Michael Farrell
(‘the man wears shorts’)
                   reading in tandem with Martin Harrison

                                                                    “Re-
                                   New the Word”
              says the poster.

                                            Sitting, I view
                 legs of the poets
                                                 (“Gimme da word . . .”
said a cartoon in Pam’s early book;
                                           the frightened reply
            “I . . . I’ve forgotten it.”)
                                                       When Michael reads
a guy with beard and sandals
                                          walks out.

                                       *

                              Home,
                                    post-reading

the hottest it’s been in this room
                                            a moon
                                                       like the one that hangs over
         fields of Shoreham
                                            Samuel Palmer’s harvest
                           except here
                                    suburb, not ripened corn
         or both?
                          (suburb and corn)
                                                   that would be Brisbane
                the “blessed city”
                                                   as Gwen Harwood had it
                                      in wartime
                                                   and me
                                                                               an age
                                             of consumption
                                                              a river-side
                                      of plasma screens.
                                                  Who needs the moon?

                                         *

    Coffee at Jamie’s Espresso
                      a minimalist model plane above the refrigerator

             wire body
                           pathetic wooden wing
                                              propeller spun by the fan

    (what was the line from EM Forster
                                                        highlighted METAPHOR
                                   by some scholar:

“the fan rotated like a wounded bird”

                                   a metaphor for poetry?)

                                 Another coffee
     “Hi Bronwyn”
                                      is that sculpture on stage
               really fish fucking?

                                              The poet takes notes.
     New poetry
                        a veneer of theory
                                                              John Forbes
                                    invoked by the multitudes.

                 Outside, the heat
                                                 “neon in daylight”
                         (the 24-hour grocery)
                                                         inside
                                                                   FAME
                         I wanna live forever . . .
                                                                               No Joke!

                                          *

James Street Bistro.

                           Will my coffee arrive? (the waitress busy
            chatting up the young ‘suits’).

                                             It does, but it’s the
                       wrong coffee.

                 ‘The Reverend David Sheppard . . . Freddie Trueman
     . . . I’ll remember that forever’

                                                        Revelation of the year:
John Howard doesn’t like cricket.

                                                      “Downtown Huddersfield . . .”

                I want a bistro, not an open-plan office.

                                              *

                                                                  At Vroom, figuring
                                       what it is I like about
      music played in cafés

                                           generic ‘acid jazz’

           neither ‘acid’ nor ‘jazz’
                                                          but ok for coffee

      (‘Ambulance Music’
                                           invokes cool for the texters
                             and me
                                                      I’m part of this theatre
wet ink dries visibly

                                   charades of western life

                                                    as, at home, on the wall

the fall of Capa’s republican soldier, over
                                                               an exploding sand dune
      somewhere in W.A.
                                       by Tim Burns

                                                    (not the Tasmanian Tim Burns
                    the formerly Sydney one)

                                          rain on the suburbs

                                 drill vibration
                                                  from the building site

                                           *

Max Planck said
                         “paradigm shift always happens
                                                                          after the funeral”

      apparently.

                 As I age I look
                                            more and more like a thug

                                                                     waiting
                                      with Basil Bunting
       for that fad
                            (fiction)
                                            to pass.

(at the writers’ festival

                     the mild boredom of hearing people
                                                                discuss their work
                               – it’s what you do –
                                                                              Hello Ivor!
                        the clouds mass
                                                     promising STORM
       like the rain last night
                               horizontal
                                           as I drove Rosemary to the airport

         (‘airpoet’
                                               said Richard Tipping.

               Thanks Richard.


         At the New Farm Deli:
                                           Alla Zonza!

                                                                          Already
                 it’s October
Laurie Duggan

Laurie Duggan

(Australië, 1949)

Landen

Ontdek andere dichters en gedichten uit Australië

Gedichten Dichters

Talen

Ontdek andere dichters en gedichten in het Engels

Gedichten Dichters
Close

September Song

             Bill Doggett and Earl Bostic: Trading Licks
                                                                    a great compilation
always reminds me of Ken
                                             probably still at work

             in Adelaide, though thinking by now
                                                         of coffee and writing

                                  at Baci’s (or the Flash),
Hindley Street.
                                  Here it’s hot

                                                     unseasonable September
                leaves of brown
                                                              come tumbling down

           Friday evening of the poetry fest

                                                            I’ll stay home
                watch the light dim over Bulimba
                                                                   cook mushrooms
                                     a la Grecque

                                           (bougainvillea a mass of crimson
on the balcony, the door
                                           waving in the wind though held
   by an elastic fastener).

                          The versifiers will be hot . . .

              I mean hot, not
                                          ‘hot’
                                                   (a seven part performance
of the deadly sins sounds
                                            deadly)
                                                                         but it will be great

to hear what the poets in Sydney (and Melbourne) are doing
                                                                                    these days.

                                                                         Bostic’s ‘Flamingo’:
             that great blast, rescues a tune
                                                         from ‘lightness’

                                                     (Coltrane would take this on)
                                  half-a-century old
                    like me
                                            the 1950s
                                                             a now unimaginable world
          of bright lights, electricity
                                           coloured drinks
                  “we don’t need alcohol
                                                              we just like it”.

        Whatever you say, Frank.

                                                               Are Pam and Jane
                                    wandering Rome
                                              or escaped to a cool villa elsewhere?
Is Pam writing

                 a view across Trastevere to the Tiber

                                                 positioned at a desk in the apartment
                    as Ken
                           sets up in the Baci with coffee, cake,
                                                                                The Guardian,
                                               me
                                                          on my back on the sofa
                           my preferred writing method

. . . from which I watch aircraft
                                       descend over Hamilton,

    my friends in their various places
                                                            in the fading twilight

              like a line from The Star Spangled Banner
                                                                                    a couch
                        Kerouac was too patriotic to sit on.

                                           *

                                 I cook dinner to
                                                               Danny Gatton, 88
                                        Elmira Street,
                                                                      the moon, yellow
                                               gibbous
                                                     over Morningside,
               thinking 50s hits
                                               a teenager imagining
                                 being there
                                                    (on the moon)
                                                                                    away
                                               from all this
                                                                  the cream-puff face
                             of George Méliès satellite
                                                                        (Satellite of love?)

                Danny G an heir to this philosophy
                                                                               (he
                                         hanged himself in the garage,

                                                                      though his music now
                                 seems benign enough

especially the theme to The Simpsons
                                         or, heartbreak, a version of
                                  ‘In my room’.

                                       *

                                       A day later:
I’m sitting on the floor
                                               (not lying down)
           at the Judith Wright Centre
                                                        – the poetry
           and Frank Sinatra
                                     continue –
                                                                     Jill Jones
                             not liking the heat,
                                                  Michael Farrell
(‘the man wears shorts’)
                   reading in tandem with Martin Harrison

                                                                    “Re-
                                   New the Word”
              says the poster.

                                            Sitting, I view
                 legs of the poets
                                                 (“Gimme da word . . .”
said a cartoon in Pam’s early book;
                                           the frightened reply
            “I . . . I’ve forgotten it.”)
                                                       When Michael reads
a guy with beard and sandals
                                          walks out.

                                       *

                              Home,
                                    post-reading

the hottest it’s been in this room
                                            a moon
                                                       like the one that hangs over
         fields of Shoreham
                                            Samuel Palmer’s harvest
                           except here
                                    suburb, not ripened corn
         or both?
                          (suburb and corn)
                                                   that would be Brisbane
                the “blessed city”
                                                   as Gwen Harwood had it
                                      in wartime
                                                   and me
                                                                               an age
                                             of consumption
                                                              a river-side
                                      of plasma screens.
                                                  Who needs the moon?

                                         *

    Coffee at Jamie’s Espresso
                      a minimalist model plane above the refrigerator

             wire body
                           pathetic wooden wing
                                              propeller spun by the fan

    (what was the line from EM Forster
                                                        highlighted METAPHOR
                                   by some scholar:

“the fan rotated like a wounded bird”

                                   a metaphor for poetry?)

                                 Another coffee
     “Hi Bronwyn”
                                      is that sculpture on stage
               really fish fucking?

                                              The poet takes notes.
     New poetry
                        a veneer of theory
                                                              John Forbes
                                    invoked by the multitudes.

                 Outside, the heat
                                                 “neon in daylight”
                         (the 24-hour grocery)
                                                         inside
                                                                   FAME
                         I wanna live forever . . .
                                                                               No Joke!

                                          *

James Street Bistro.

                           Will my coffee arrive? (the waitress busy
            chatting up the young ‘suits’).

                                             It does, but it’s the
                       wrong coffee.

                 ‘The Reverend David Sheppard . . . Freddie Trueman
     . . . I’ll remember that forever’

                                                        Revelation of the year:
John Howard doesn’t like cricket.

                                                      “Downtown Huddersfield . . .”

                I want a bistro, not an open-plan office.

                                              *

                                                                  At Vroom, figuring
                                       what it is I like about
      music played in cafés

                                           generic ‘acid jazz’

           neither ‘acid’ nor ‘jazz’
                                                          but ok for coffee

      (‘Ambulance Music’
                                           invokes cool for the texters
                             and me
                                                      I’m part of this theatre
wet ink dries visibly

                                   charades of western life

                                                    as, at home, on the wall

the fall of Capa’s republican soldier, over
                                                               an exploding sand dune
      somewhere in W.A.
                                       by Tim Burns

                                                    (not the Tasmanian Tim Burns
                    the formerly Sydney one)

                                          rain on the suburbs

                                 drill vibration
                                                  from the building site

                                           *

Max Planck said
                         “paradigm shift always happens
                                                                          after the funeral”

      apparently.

                 As I age I look
                                            more and more like a thug

                                                                     waiting
                                      with Basil Bunting
       for that fad
                            (fiction)
                                            to pass.

(at the writers’ festival

                     the mild boredom of hearing people
                                                                discuss their work
                               – it’s what you do –
                                                                              Hello Ivor!
                        the clouds mass
                                                     promising STORM
       like the rain last night
                               horizontal
                                           as I drove Rosemary to the airport

         (‘airpoet’
                                               said Richard Tipping.

               Thanks Richard.


         At the New Farm Deli:
                                           Alla Zonza!

                                                                          Already
                 it’s October

September Song

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