Gedicht
Alan Wearne
Poem for Cathy Coleborne
Poem for Cathy Coleborne
Poem for Cathy Coleborne
Put aside your essays, theseskids in black, it’s Friday night.
Time to seek out from our species
Ms or Mr Maybe Right.
Clear the decks and clear the sinus,
what has gone will come around,
whilst we peek at Melbourne’s finest
happy het’ro hunting ground.
Early twenties to mid thirties
see them primp, preen, proffer, prowl.
From assertors to assertees
one almighty mating growl.
Take a brace of Bruegel peasants,
add hormones from an on-heat hound:
behold our own post adolescence
happy het’ro hunting ground!
Every urge deserves depiction
(pluralists behold, rejoice!)
even (yes) young adult fiction
offers no invalid choice,
whilst, so faintly s-and-m-ey
micro whipped and lightly bound,
Fitzroy remains at least a semi-
het’ro happy hunting ground.
There was once this swingin’ couple,
likeminded duos made ’em click.
His tolerance seemed mighty supple
till she dumped him . . . for a chick.
‘How’d,’ he mused ‘that option get her?’
Beer by beer his sorrows drowned.
The ex meanwhile composed this letter
from her former hunting ground:
Please dad didn’t want to scare you,
girl-love though seems quite the rage . . .
our word is ‘choice’ so mum don’t dare you
think I’m going through a ‘stage’.
Been eyed off by heaps of ladies,
some were jeaned and some were gowned
and some would sooner head to Hades
than any het’ro hunting ground.
Young, gay, proud and inner-metro
sense the limits, know the load:
‘When Fridays get so hyper-het’ro
here we come Commercial Road!
Party’s over, must say byebyes,
feel embarrassed hanging round
XY chromosomes and YYs
in your happy hunting ground!’
Then one winter, doped on Codral,
some poor loser simply sooked:
‘Madame, may I dance this quadrille?’
‘Sorry sport my card is booked.’
Whither happy? Whither hunting?
Uppers upped and downers downed,
his psyche through its manic shunting
would fill a Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Like martyrs frying o’er a griddle
or madman in some film noir
(‘Gentleman with ancient riddle
seeks lady to replace his ma . . .’)
this hero’s role might suit a canto
(though they went out with Ezra Pound!).
O tragi-comic/ soapie-panto/
unhappy-happy hunting ground!
One evening, blatant as the mulga
two kids locked their eyes and gaped.
I might say more but aren’t that vulgar
(it’s as if I had them taped).
Itemise each short ’n’ curly?
Labia and pubic mound?
Let’s just say they went home early
from the het’ro hunting ground.
Whatever then they did they did right,
age old normal, on the square.
Imagine though an hour past midnight
eavesdrop on this lucky pair:
‘We’ve been happy-hunting-grounded!’
‘Now are verbed who once were nouned!’
And their carnal joy resounded
through you-damn-well-know-what ground:
‘All praise for this thing between us!’
Some nights it seems The Builder’s Arms
worships nothing short of Venus,
whose excursions and alarms
for postgrad, activist, backpacker
(careful, don’t swoon in a swound!)
brings forth that pleasantest of yacker
whilst Planet Earth turns hunting ground:
L.A. blondes (perhaps their mommies)
(soft) dealers at their hallowed task,
darkest koories, palest pommies,
Sydney ‘wits’ who smirking ask
‘Can’t this town get colder? Moister?’
Kiwis straight from Milford Sound . . .
Fuck the world, you were our oyster
happy het’ro hunting ground!
© 2008, Alan Wearne
From: The Australian Popular Song Book
Publisher: Giramondo Publishing, Sydney
From: The Australian Popular Song Book
Publisher: Giramondo Publishing, Sydney
Gedichten
Gedichten van Alan Wearne
Close
Poem for Cathy Coleborne
Put aside your essays, theseskids in black, it’s Friday night.
Time to seek out from our species
Ms or Mr Maybe Right.
Clear the decks and clear the sinus,
what has gone will come around,
whilst we peek at Melbourne’s finest
happy het’ro hunting ground.
Early twenties to mid thirties
see them primp, preen, proffer, prowl.
From assertors to assertees
one almighty mating growl.
Take a brace of Bruegel peasants,
add hormones from an on-heat hound:
behold our own post adolescence
happy het’ro hunting ground!
Every urge deserves depiction
(pluralists behold, rejoice!)
even (yes) young adult fiction
offers no invalid choice,
whilst, so faintly s-and-m-ey
micro whipped and lightly bound,
Fitzroy remains at least a semi-
het’ro happy hunting ground.
There was once this swingin’ couple,
likeminded duos made ’em click.
His tolerance seemed mighty supple
till she dumped him . . . for a chick.
‘How’d,’ he mused ‘that option get her?’
Beer by beer his sorrows drowned.
The ex meanwhile composed this letter
from her former hunting ground:
Please dad didn’t want to scare you,
girl-love though seems quite the rage . . .
our word is ‘choice’ so mum don’t dare you
think I’m going through a ‘stage’.
Been eyed off by heaps of ladies,
some were jeaned and some were gowned
and some would sooner head to Hades
than any het’ro hunting ground.
Young, gay, proud and inner-metro
sense the limits, know the load:
‘When Fridays get so hyper-het’ro
here we come Commercial Road!
Party’s over, must say byebyes,
feel embarrassed hanging round
XY chromosomes and YYs
in your happy hunting ground!’
Then one winter, doped on Codral,
some poor loser simply sooked:
‘Madame, may I dance this quadrille?’
‘Sorry sport my card is booked.’
Whither happy? Whither hunting?
Uppers upped and downers downed,
his psyche through its manic shunting
would fill a Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Like martyrs frying o’er a griddle
or madman in some film noir
(‘Gentleman with ancient riddle
seeks lady to replace his ma . . .’)
this hero’s role might suit a canto
(though they went out with Ezra Pound!).
O tragi-comic/ soapie-panto/
unhappy-happy hunting ground!
One evening, blatant as the mulga
two kids locked their eyes and gaped.
I might say more but aren’t that vulgar
(it’s as if I had them taped).
Itemise each short ’n’ curly?
Labia and pubic mound?
Let’s just say they went home early
from the het’ro hunting ground.
Whatever then they did they did right,
age old normal, on the square.
Imagine though an hour past midnight
eavesdrop on this lucky pair:
‘We’ve been happy-hunting-grounded!’
‘Now are verbed who once were nouned!’
And their carnal joy resounded
through you-damn-well-know-what ground:
‘All praise for this thing between us!’
Some nights it seems The Builder’s Arms
worships nothing short of Venus,
whose excursions and alarms
for postgrad, activist, backpacker
(careful, don’t swoon in a swound!)
brings forth that pleasantest of yacker
whilst Planet Earth turns hunting ground:
L.A. blondes (perhaps their mommies)
(soft) dealers at their hallowed task,
darkest koories, palest pommies,
Sydney ‘wits’ who smirking ask
‘Can’t this town get colder? Moister?’
Kiwis straight from Milford Sound . . .
Fuck the world, you were our oyster
happy het’ro hunting ground!
From: The Australian Popular Song Book
Poem for Cathy Coleborne
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