31 March 2012

Garmin Nuvi Aufait

garmin

A Garmin Nuvi adventure for me
recreational therapy of a hand-held
GPS navigator sans traffic stress

Yeah, sure, I knew the way just as
the driver did but we liked to hear the
stressed out voice calling directions

Our trip Peachester – Hampton
via Caboolture and Burpengary, a mere
400 clicks return –
less stress

The only agony an Esk Bakery meat pie
as the driver’s treat which attracted
fairly strenuous disapprobation

Apparently it seems that theatrically
claiming genuine surprise on discovery
of a piece of meat was totally uncalled-for

But the day ended gladly – there’s
fabulous Toowoomba fertiliser in the ute
and I’m truly Garmin Nuvi aufait
© 7 October 2011, I. D. Carswell

29 March 2012

Estranged Reality

chasing-time-clock1-500x379

Accused of leaving early – & in
a literal sense watched less than
spied upon with impeached eye
whether our time is the same –
say what you will but be honest
with that estranged reality

What is it which makes me the
victim – your reclusive sense of
temporal inference? Who are
you to judge where we balance
if the fulcrum functions only as
separation of your singularity

I didn’t leave early by any logic
which figures in your unsteady
measurement – sad to say that
reflects upon whatever you’ve
succumbed to since inception
of your mystifying malady

You’re the recalcitrant I’d say,
abandoned to disputed failure;
all this faking it isn’t necessarily
about me is it, but fine ideas you
harbour tragically about who
properly represents whom
© 27 March 2012, I. D. Carswell

For my Little Sister Marilese – and
the peremptory saga of leaving early

28 March 2012

Gollum Elected

Smeagol


Gollum Elected – who’d‘ve thought
it but deranged fantasy, and this IS
Qld where cattle dogs wear Jackie
Howes ‘n smoke their own rollies

Haven’t listened t’ th’ radio since th’
‘lection in case I hear ‘is sibilant lisp
explaining just how good it’s gonna
be for the meek and downtrodden

Y’ referring to me y’ could ask but
won’t – I mean we were only kickin’
th’ Labor mob out – not givin’ you
a bloody mandate to simper gladly

So quieten down y’ clown, ‘n get on
with raisin’ taxes etc, like you’ll do
anyway by blamin’ the other lot for
leavin’ no cash in the till

Meanwhile nothin’s changed but for
this Tolkien character who’s Premier –
hey, maybe the other States will be
too nervous to take particular note
© 27 March 2012, I. D. Carswell

Campbell Newman elected Qld Premier
in 24 April 2012 landslide LNP victory

27 March 2012

This Sentiment

This sentiment remains a magic base
entrenched, a monument for friends
embrace; in truth a eulogy immaculate
upraised for all to see

Marika’s grace is pure as words
romantic deed, a wedded gentleness
in Ed embraces nuptial vows; unity in
message clear endows this rare accord

Passion lauded strong and sung aloud
engages fates’ contrivances, applause
regales delight in loving praise of
able promises they’ve made

So join and say in harmony with both
of them this magic day

   ... I do ...
© 8 October 2011, I. D. Carswell

For Marika & Ed

24 March 2012

Crohamhurst’s ‘T’

SE Qld Map
Expressing latitude and longitude in decimal
degrees won’t tag your back; ‘twill make a
fair assessment on a map of what you want
to see – a place prescribed aligned within an
intersection set at ‘T’ of Crohamhurst – from
128 km Brisbane (Mt Stapylton) Radar Loop,
that at least pontificates on where our Met is
at, or where it looks it’s likely going to be

Taken me a host of failed attempts to set a
mark indelibly right where the Orchard here
in Vieritz Road assumes locality, or as near
as damn, and Google helped progress that
quest with grand exactitude – a more or less
semantic data set off Bureau’s radar map
© 13 January 2012, I. D. Carswell

23 March 2012

Raven Speak

Crow

these crows articulated their belief
that ‘aaarrrk’ phonetically engaged
their diphthongs best – for ages I’d
alleged they rarely used a silent ‘f’
to head the chary word and said it
stood to satirize most any claim to
corvid subtlety – instead they were
a mob of arrant pollies in debate

old mate they say, again y’ aaarkin’
wrong for crows we ain’t & ravens
true we be; ‘n here’s a fact y’ need
accommodate; to ‘ear our speech
complete just aaarkin’ think how
you’d articulate the bloody same!

© 3 October 2011, I. D. Carswell

22 March 2012

Oil Light

Oil lite

& we’re pulling into a 24hr service
station 4 am on a market Sunday;
so yeah, not your usual hullabaloo

and not your usual morning-easy
harum-scarum bounty hunter afoot
seeking early-hour prey

this is meta-state dread bought
off Saturday’s 400 km inexplicably
trouble free anxiety at work, but

30 km in light of it rouses concern-
weary thoughts of an ailing fate 
surmised inherently unhealthy

or convincingly such anyway - in
imagining worst possibility & finding
the damn HANDBRAKE engaged

NOT an OIL LIGHT! What revelation!
You’d think cognoscente’s penny’d
drop -
but hey, we’re all stress-wet

too out-of-phase blessed to see
auspicious humour spinning relieved
fables for tomorrow’s levity
© 10 October 2011, I. D. Carswell

Innocence

child

It’s not unsavoury innocence
marred by memories of flavour
taints, old events and must of
ages or its consequence, but
yet ovation-rich in phrases of
a likeness plagued on pages
blank, of things once redolent
with scents commemoration

A past cannot be over-writ in
praise with easy words whose
wit post scribes its genesis –
we view today in naked terms
as residues of who we were,
as use-assays imperatives
© 6 January 2012, I. D. Carswell

19 March 2012

Faithless Truth

BE060435
If what was claimed at that soiree was
true we’re turned to stone; his coming
out was cloned politically – a cachet-
dressed viridity, armour against a few
contrapuntal party views we proposed
& heard bare-faced denied or damned
maliciously as vicious lies betrothed

He’d never read or listened to such
words he said, never knew who would
have said them anyway, and evidence
was easy to obtain it wasn’t ever true;
a gathered faithful cooed with bobbing
heads inclined, agreeing to his just and
wisely sage defence of party line

They’re yours, we said, as reported in
the Press which favoured views you’d
given counsel to – and he’d not denied!
Ironically we mayn’t trust the Press he
sighed, for proof it truly quoted origins
abusing more insane agendas than the
ranks of lunacy’s salacious banks

Its total war out there he raved – and
faithless truth’s a mortal Enemy! Hark
to me who will redeem our Party’s true
belief; I never lied about my faith, ever
made a lesser claim – yet you’d lay the
blame implied of loyalty misplaced on
truth in lieu of proof I ever really lied
© 16 March 2012, I. D. Carswell

17 March 2012

Life Force, a commentary by Imogen Reed

Life Force

These three poems all explore different responses to life and death. They range from the death of a baby, the urgent life force of the young male poet and an older poet's determination to carry on living in the face of death. These are three thought-provoking and powerful poems which force us to question our own feelings surrounding life, death and sacrifice. Poetry, at its best, functions in this way and enables the reader to explore aspects of life that they might prefer not to. But they are important questions that arguably all human beings should ask of themselves at some point.

Tears Falling Silently
Where is the love that yields the finest
cant of sacrifice? Where is the poignant
knife that steals a newborn’s nascent life?
In the love of a mother who strangles her
child so quiet saves other lives destined
to be destroyed – in the night of despair,
in a wretched blight of fear consummate,
in the lore of the tribe. In the giving and
the serving love is immaculate but none is
as bright as the light of love in a mother’s
eyes with tears falling silently on the still
warm corpse of her just smothered child.
© 18 July 2007, I.D. Carswell

In Tears Falling Silently there is a palpable unease in the poet’s exploration of a mother’s infanticide. The mother has to smother her child lest its crying leads to the discovery and inevitable death of the ‘tribe’. It’s the terrible choice that was reportedly made in wartime by some mothers, and here the poet explores this terrible choice and the sacrifice it requires, both by her and by the baby. The poet describes as admirable, if terrible, the love the mother shows at the moment she smothers the child, ‘none is a bright as the light of love in a mother’s eyes’ at the moment she weeps over the child she has just killed. But there is a deep ambivalence here. Whilst admiring the will of the mother, there is also an acknowledgement that the child has been killed for the good of the tribe, to protect the greatest number of people. ‘Where is the love here?’, could be the subtext. Is the love strongest for the tribe, for the baby, or for herself as she sacrifices her child? Where, asks the poet, ‘is the love that yields the finest cant of sacrifice?’ In this act? ‘Cant’ – meaning insincerity, or pretence, is applied to the act of sacrifice, which is normally thought of as a noble act. The knife is not cruel, or savage, but ‘poignant’. There is more calculation and regret than passion in the act. It is a calculated sacrifice, and a terrible one, taking a ‘nascent’ life before it had a chance to be lived. This poem challenges the reader to explore this difficult idea, but offers no comforting answers. This lack of resolution on the moral issue recognises the different position that each reader will take. It’s an unsettling poem that leaves the reader feeling uncomfortable, which is clearly the poet’s intention.

I Am 25
With a love a madness for Shelley
Chatterton Rimbaud
and the needy-yap of my youth
has gone from ear to ear:
I HATE OLD POETMEN!
Especially old poetmen who retract
who consult other old poetmen
who speak their youth in whispers,
saying:--I did those then
but that was then
that was then--
O I would quiet old men
say to them:--I am your friend
what you once were, thru me
you'll be again--
Then at night in the confidence of their homes
rip out their apology-tongues
and steal their poems.
Gregory Corso

Corso was one of the youngest of the Beat poets, and here youthful energy is on full display, his poetry driven by the ruthlessness of youth and his passion for his craft. Whilst professing his ‘love a madness for Shelley’ and 'the old poets Chatterton and Rimbault’ he simultaneously expresses contempt for the OLD POETMEN – capitalised as he emphasises his contempt. His anger? It’s for the old poets who have diluted and disowned the poetry of their youth – the youth that the poet himself now feels so urgently. How could they betray that passion? It is so real to Corso that he would ‘quiet old men’, a sinister forshadowing of his stated plan to befriend them, calm then, and then steal their poetry.

The title tells us all we need to know. This is the restless energy in poetic form of one who wants everything now and has not yet learned the gentleness and wisdom of old men, who can reflect with just as much pleasure as a young man, but in a different way. For the poet, to ‘speak their youth in whispers’ is a betrayal. The violence of his feelings is echoed in the rhymes and half rhymes in the poem, the gentleness of the old men’s ‘then, then, then’ met with with ‘men’, internal rhyme ‘them’, followed by half rhyme, ‘friend’ ‘again’. The claustrophobia of this rhyming is echoes the closeness the poet would have to simulate in order to get close enough to the old poetmen to steal their poems.

It is a poem of great ferocity and passion. It lives and breathes, with life and energy. It is one of Corso’s earliest poems, when he was just emerging onto the beat poetry scene.

The Lesson
I keep on dying again.
Veins collapse, opening like the
Small fists of sleeping
Children.
Memory of old tombs,
Rotting flesh and worms do
Not convince me against
The challenge. The years
And cold defeat live deep in
Lines along my face.
They dull my eyes, yet
I keep on dying,
Because I love to live.
Maya Angelou

Another poem about life, and the energy of life from the superb Maya Angelou, one of America’s finest poets. The Lesson she is teaching us here, or learning for herself as she writes perhaps, is that the trials of aging ‘do not convince’ her to give up the challenge of living. Living has driven deep lines into her face, from worry and stress, her body has weakened, with the veins collapsing, and the sense of mortality is not far from her thoughts, in the ‘Memory of old tombs’ and the decay after death. But they are brushed aside, because to allow them time would distract from the business of living. ‘I keep on dying/Because I love to live.’ This is an interesting and powerful poem which, like the poet’s views, refuses to rhyme. The voice of sense tells us that we should slow down, take things easy, preserve our bodies and try to avoid the stress and worry that cause frown lines and weakened veins. But deep inside the speaker is the love of life which urges her on regardless, a passion for life which refuses to compromise. She is akin more to Corso here than his ‘old poetmen’. She won’t whisper her youth. She’s going down fighting.

Lisa Hardberg is a writer from London, England. Being a poet isn't a profitable life that leads to the best cash isa balance so she also covers topics as broad as world affairs and finance news.

Maya Angelou

maya

http://www.placestory.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/maya.jpg

Gregory Corso (left) with Allen Ginsberg

Gregory_Corso_and_Allen_Ginsberg_young

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/mk/6/66/Gregory_Corso_and_Allen_Ginsberg_young.jpg

13 March 2012

Opus

ashes

Knowing what it is that sits between the
whom you were and where you are within
this muddled mess still fails to assuage a
single sign defined placatory – it’s just a
niche prescribed, a flourish in grand geste,
and me who was and fitted in the corpse
is dead, a subtle end exemplified all fair
and fine inside its rustic comic-tragedy

If surprised I’d be a voiceless urn of ashes
spread before the pyre had ever burned this
opus evidence – but yet I see pretence now
dressed in finery, as if intent on making real
a play on words defining hence the who and
what and whence of me
© 9 January 2012, I. D. Carswell

03 March 2012

RWC Semi-final

goal-posts-at-a-rugby-game-keyimagery_9351_350x350

the shonky deal would seem to be
just how much ‘creditability’ is in the
claim Robbie Deans’ an NZRFU plant
foisted upon Australia and deviously
manipulated by our arch foe

well, if it’s true we’ll see this Sunday
at Eden Park; not that I’d wager on
ARU being a silent partner or dupe
in a farcical charade – with due
respect, Deans’ a damn fine coach

ask any player, you don’t see any
bloke at less than his best and they
like the guy; there’s jauntiness in
their step and that’s because they
are a team to be reckoned with

but it’s a case of beating ‘ye olde
enemy’ on a field where historically
our finest efforts seemed less than
magnificent – but I am imagining
the game before it is played?

in respect for the game they’ll play
their hearts out Sunday; so who are
we to hedge bets, seek sacrificial
lambs implying only Quade Cooper or
Robbie Deans need share the blame
© 11 October 2011, I. D. Carswell

NOTE: While it doesn’t fit the script of an Australia – New Zealand final –
which would have been fabulous, there is still a serious game to be played
this weekend. With England, Ireland, Scotland and South Africa out of the
picture it is now up to Wales, France, Australia and New Zealand to entertain ...

02 March 2012

Finest Logic

511358a

Begun in the finest logic of unbiased
selflessness
– worthy discussion
points listed for a biennial,
but often further delayed,
visits to my GP

Whom I still can’t be certain
is at the same Surgery; last
supposed ill-health consultation
decided I wasn’t ailing, my version
anyway, and I hadn’t returned

There were 4 points on that Nov
09 list – aches and pains to
the fore; but in Jan 12 it reaches
9 in stolidly graphic detail
sharing only three

In explanation, & structural to my
current state of being,  ordinates
are age related deterioration,
obviously easily confirmed without
the prerequisite of consultation

Hardly seems worth making an effort
unless I convince myself I am
severely depressed -
much more
than I believe, which I’m
surely beginning to be
© 4 January 2012, I. D. Carswell

01 March 2012

Homily

Adversity

whomever said adversity brings out the best
in you didn’t make clear it was an adumbrate
homily demurring classically situational angst;
adversity is great when it’s plain who’s for or
against – & to recognise it means a chance to
avoid inevitable end-game ambits impasse of
squalid character assassination, surely that’s
enough to leave you gasping – sordid endings

appraising dead debate less vanquished or
victor – no, it’s not obsessive winning to get
you pleased, it’s about your personality; and
the crock of shit in commutation is – there’s
invariably and unquestionably always proof
it was someone else’s ridiculous idea!
© 5 January 2012, I. D. Carswell