And no use asking if I would have died
   Had this one nailed me. When a man is bald
   And soon to face an aria from Tosca,
   It’s not as if he needs a pile of crap
   Dumped on his head from fifty thousand feet
   By some Stealth fowl. And spare me the assurance
   That it wipes off. I didn’t sign on for this.
   Tramps and Bowlers
   In the park in front of my place, every night
   A bunch of tramps sleep on the wooden porch
   Of the bowling green club-house. They shed no light.
   No policeman ever wakes them with a torch,
   Because no one reports their nightly stay.
   People like me who take an early walk
   Just after dawn will see them start the day
   By packing up. They barely even talk,
   Loading their duffel bags. They leave no trace,
   Thus proving some who sleep rough aren’t so dumb.
   Tramps blow their secret if they trash the place:
   This lot make sure that, when the bowlers come,
   There’s not a beer-can to pollute the scene.
   And so, by day, neat paragons of thrift
   And duty bow down to the very green
   Which forms, by night, for scruffs who merely drift,
   Their front lawn. If the bowlers only knew,
   For sure they’d put in for a higher fence.
   They’d have a point, but it would spoil the view
   More than the tramps will, if they have the sense
   To keep on cleaning up before they go,
   Protecting indolence with industry:
   A touch of what the bowlers value so.
   Which way of life is better? Don’t ask me –
   I chose both, so I’d be the last to know.
   Fires Burning, Fires Burning
   Over Hamburg
   The Lancaster crews could feel the heat
   Through the sides of the aircraft.
   The fire was six thousand feet high.
   At Birkenau
   When burning a lot of bodies, the SS found
   The thing to do was to put down a layer
   Of women first.
   They had more fat in them.
   In Tokyo
   Some people who survived in a canal
   Saw a horse on fire running through the streets.
   But few who saw it were left to remember anything:
   Even the water burned.
   In New York
   Some couples, given the choice
   Between the flames and a long fall,
   Outflanked the heat and went down holding hands.
   Come with me, you imagine the men saying,
   I know a quicker way.
   In Sydney
   Next to my mother’s coffin
   I gave thanks that she would shortly meet
   A different kind of fire,
   Having died first, and in due time.
   Yusra
   The Public Morals Unit of Hamas
   Saw Yusra al-Azzuri, bold as brass,
   In Gaza City, walk with her betrothed,
   Her sister also present. Half unclothed,
   All three behaved as if beyond the reach
   Of justice. Laughing, dancing on the beach,
   They almost touched. They thought to drive away.
   The Unit followed them without delay.
   Her young man drove. Beside him as they fled,
   Yusra died quickly in a hail of lead.
   The other two were hauled out of the car
   And beaten senseless. With an iron bar,
   The riddled corpse of Yusra, as the worst
   Offender, was assaulted till it burst.
   She would have prayed for death. It can be said,
   Therefore, it was a blessing she was dead
   Already. Thus we look for just one touch
   Of grace in this catastrophe. Too much
   To bear, the thought that those young men were glad
   To be there. Won’t the memory drive them mad?
   Could they not see the laughter in her face
   Was heaven on earth, the only holy place?
   Perhaps they guessed, and acted from the fear
   That Paradise is nowhere if not here.
   Yusra, your name too lovely to forget
   Shines like a sunrise joined to a sunset.
   The day between went with you. Where you are,
   That light around you is your life, Yusra.
   Private Prayer at Yasukuni Shrine
   An Oka kamikaze rocket bomb
   Sits in the vestibule, its rising sun
   Ablaze with pride.
   Names of the fallen are on CD-ROM.
   The war might have been lost. The peace was won:
   A resurrection after suicide.
   For once I feel the urge to send my thoughts
   Your way, as I suppose these people do.
   I see the tide
   Come in on Papua. Their troop transports,
   The beach, our hospital. Over to you:
   Why was one little miracle denied?
   After they made our nurses wade waist deep
   They picked their targets and they shot them all.
   The waves ran red.
   Somehow this is a memory I keep.
   I hear the lost cries of the last to fall
   As if I, too, had been among the dead.
   Those same troops fought south to the Golden Stairs,
   Where they were stopped. They starved, and finally
   The last few fed
   On corpses. And the victory would be theirs
   If I were glad? That’s what you’re telling me?
   It would have been in vain that your son bled?
   But wasn’t it? What were you thinking when
   Our daughters died? You couldn’t interfere,
   I hear you say.
   That must mean that you never can. Well, then,
   At least I know now that no prayers from here
   Have ever made much difference either way,
   And therefore we weren’t fighting you as well.
   Old people here saw the Missouri loom
   Out in the bay
   And thought the end had come. They couldn’t tell
   That the alternative to certain doom
   Would be pachinko and the cash to play
   A game of chance, all day and every day.
   In that bright shrine you really do preside.
   What you have said
   Comes true. The DOW is down on the Nikkei.
   The royal baby takes a buggy ride.
   The last war criminal will die in bed.
   Naomi from Namibia
   In the Brisbane Botanical Gardens,
   Walking the avenue of weeping figs,
   You can see exuded latex stain the bark
   Like adolescent sperm. A metamorphosis:
   The trunks must be full of randy boys.
   At home, the Java willows
   When planted alongside a watercourse
   Were said to stem the breeding of mosquitoes.
   Here, they have nothing else to do
   Except to stand there looking elegant
   In Elle McPherson lingerie.
   From the walkway through the mangrove mud-flats
   Spread south from overwhelming Asia,
   You can see the breathing tubes of Viet Cong crabs
   And imagine Arnie hiding from the Predator
   Like a mud-skipper playing possum,
   Although he did that, of course, in South America.
   Below the tangled branches, bubbles tick.
   For a century and a half, the giant banyan
   Has grown like a cathedral heading downwards,
   As a dumb Chartres might slowly dive for cover
   Through shallows clear as air. In India
   At least a dozen families would be dying
   By inches in its colonnades.
   
					     					 			; At the kiosk, Naomi from Namibia
   Serves me a skimmed milk strawberry milkshake.
   She has come here to lead her ideal life,
   Like almost all these trees.
   They get to stay, but she has to go back.
   William Dobell’s Cypriot
   The Cypriot brought his wine-dark eyes with him
   Along with his skin and hair. He also brought
   That shirt. Swathes of fine fabric clothe a slim
   Frame with a grace bespeaking taste and thought.
   Australia, 1940. There were few
   Men native-born who had that kind of style.
   Hence the attention Dobell gave the blue
   Collar and cuffs, to make us pause awhile
   And see a presence that did not belong.
   This sitter, sitting here, caught by this hand?
   Caught beautifully. No, there is nothing wrong
   About this transportation to Queensland
   Of ancient subtleties. It’s merely odd.
   A man whom he had loved and seen asleep
   The painter painted naked, a Greek god.
   But then he had the sudden wit to keep
   The clothes, and thus the heritage, in the next
   Picture. A window from a men’s-wear store,
   It doubles as the greatest early text
   Of the immigration. What we were before
   Looks back through this to what we would become.
   We see a sense of nuance head our way
   To make the raw rich, complicate the sum
   Of qualities, prepare us for today.
   Now that the day is ours, the time arrives
   To remember destiny began as chance,
   And history is as frail as human lives.
   A young and foreign smile, love at first glance:
   Painter and painted possibly first met
   Just because one admired the other’s tie.
   A year old then, I live now in their debt.
   This is the way they live. I too will die.
   Ghost Train to Australia
   (Container Train in Landscape, 1983–84, by Jeffrey Smart)
   I won’t this time. Silent at last and shunted
   Into its siding in the Victorian Arts Centre,
   The container train started its journey in Yugoslavia
   Two years before it arrived in Gippsland
   Among trees that echo Albert Namatjira.
   The containers echo First World War dazzle paint
   Whose solid planes of colour fooled submarines.
   Everything in the picture echoes something,
   Yet it all belongs to the painter’s unifying vision.
   How does he do that? Perhaps as a consolation
   For not being Piero della Francesca
   And lacking Christ’s birth to celebrate in Arezzo,
   He can alter the order of modern history’s pages
   Though we might need our memories to catch him in the act:
   All trains in Europe, for example, even today,
   When they are drawn by electric locos and made of metal,
   Remind us of boxcars full of unbelieving people
   And the scenes on the platform when the train pulled in.
   No amount of lusciously applied colour
   Can cover all that stark grey squalor up
   Or take away the shadow on a train’s fate.
   Simply because it is a European train,
   Even if it goes all the way to Australia
   And terminates among the eucalypts
   In a lake of perfect sunlight the whole sky deep
   And everybody gets off and there are no searchlights
   Or whips or wolf-hounds or cold-eyed efficient doctors
   And the fathers go to work on the Snowy River
   And the mothers learn the lemon meringue pie
   And the children, after they have had their tonsils out,
   Get Shelley’s lemonade and vanilla ice-cream
   And all grow up to be captain of the school,
   And the local intellectuals fly in like fruit-bats
   To lecture the new arrivals about genocide,
   The train, the train, the wonderful train
   That found visas for all aboard and now finally sits
   Shining in the bush like five bob’s worth of sweets –
   Jaffas, Cherry Ripes, Hoadley’s Violet Crumble Bars
   Glittering in the original purple and gold wrappers –
   Is still the ghost train. I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to.
   Les Saw It First
   I swam across the creek at Inverell.
   The guard of jacarandas bled their blue
   Into the water. I recall it well,
   But partly I do that because of you.
   I was a city boy. A country trip
   Was rare, and so the memories were sparse.
   I helped to plait a cracker for a whip,
   But when I swung the thing it was a farce.
   At Tingha, where they used to mine the tin,
   I searched for sapphires all day and found none.
   I briefly rode a horse and barked my shin
   When I got off, and couldn’t stand the sun
   That bleached the fence-rails to a dry, pale grey
   A hundred years before and there they were,
   Just looking wooden and what can you say?
   Sit on a stump and blink into the blur.
   I had been long away when I looked back
   Through your books and at last saw what I’d seen:
   The blue-tongue in the gum beside the track,
   The headless black snake limp as Plasticine.
   The snake was in a trench they called a race.
   Somebody threw it there when it was dead.
   Now I remember how fear froze my face
   When, further on, I found its yawning head.
   The country built the city: now I know.
   Like it or not, it got to even me,
   And not just through the Royal Easter Show,
   But the hard yakka of its poetry.
   Now I can hear the shouts of the young men
   Out after rabbits with a .22.
   I wasn’t there long, but I’m there again,
   Collecting trinkets as the magpies do.
   It’s part of me, and partly because of you.
   Signed by the Artist
   The way the bamboo leans out of the frame,
   Some of its leaves cut short by the frame’s edge,
   Makes room for swathes of air which you would think,
   If it were sold in bolts, would drape like silk.
   Below, where one pond spills from the stone ledge
   Into the next, three carp as white as milk
   Glow through the water near the painter’s name,
   A stack of characters brushed in black ink.
   The open spaces and the spare detail
   Are both compressed into that signature:
   He made his name part of the work of art.
   Slice of crisp leaf, smooth flourish of fish fin
   Are there to show you he is very sure
   Of how the balance of things kept apart
   Can shape a distance. On a larger scale
   He still leaves out far more than he puts in.
   We’re lucky that he does. What he includes,
   Almost too beautiful to contemplate,
   Already hurts our hearts. Were he to fill
   The gaps, the mind would have no place to rest,
   No peace in the collected solitudes
   Of those three fish, in how each leaf is blessed
   With life. Easy to underestimate
   A name like his. No substance. Too much skill.
   Return of the Lost City
   How far was Plato free of that ‘inflamed
   Community’ he said we should avoid?
   Sofas, incense and hookers: these he named
   Among the habits not to be enjoyed,
   And if you did, 
					     					 			 you ought to be ashamed.
   But can’t we tell, by how he sounds annoyed,
   That his Republic, planned on our behalf,
   Was where his own desires had the last laugh,
   If only as the motor for his sense
   Of discipline? Even the dreams were policed,
   By the Nocturnal Council. Such immense
   Powers of repression! What would be released
   Without them? The Republic was intense:
   The fear of relaxation never ceased.
   Hence the embargo on all works of art,
   However strict in form, that touched the heart.
   No poetry. No poets! No, not one –
   Not even Homer, if he were to be
   Reborn – could be admitted, lest the sun
   Set on the hard-won social harmony,
   And that obscene night-life which had begun
   In man’s first effort at society,
   Atlantis, should come flooding back, the way
   The sea did, or so story-tellers say.
   But Plato knew that they’d say anything:
   For money or applause or just a share
   Of an hetaera, they would dance and sing
   And turn the whole deal into a nightmare.
   The very prospect left him quivering
   With anger. There is something like despair
   Haunting the author of the ideal state,
   A taunting voice he heard while working late:
   Atlantis made you. It is what you know,
   Deep down. Atlantis and its pleasures drive
   Your thoughts. Atlantis never lets you go.
   Atlantis is where you are most alive –
   Yes, even you, you that despise it so,
   When all mankind would love it to arrive
   Again, the living dream you try to kill
   By making perfect. But you never will.
   Anniversary Serenade
   You are my alcohol and nicotine,
   My silver flask and cigarette machine.
   You watch and scratch my back, you scrub me clean.
   I mumble but you still know what I mean.
   Know what I mean?
   You read my thoughts, you see what I have seen.
   You are my egg-flip and my ego trip,
   My passion-fruit soufflé and strawberry whip.
   When the dawn comes to catch you on the hip
   I taste the sweet light on my fingertip.
   My fingertip?
   I lift it to my quivering lips and sip.
   Homecoming Queen and mother of our two
   Smart daughters who, thank God, take after you,
   This house depends on what you say and do –