The Coondle Elegies

By JOHN KINSELLA

 

1.

Bobtail skin—fat and flexibly crisp—shucked

in a roll of fencing wire in the red shed: not dead

the bearer of dead skin, expanded even. Not quite

an elegy of living into habitat reduction. What kind

of contradictory or ecstatic or emphatic elegy

is this? At this precise point, Tracy said a car

from the loop racing the clock would crash

and it did. Through a fence into someone’s living.

Perhaps they were okay with risk, celebrating

tension in a portaloo strategically located,

tilting shit downhill. The rubber scriptures,

tyre tithes, jungle-play among small holdings:

grand open market and competitive swipe,

the logos and slogans of the only ones who’d

insure with glee: Shannons. Brand-placement

in the documentary eclipse of the organic.

 

2.

The hope repetition will make tradition.

Force-fed, battered people who get a taste

for the formula and endless distension

of their orifices: stimulation must be half-

way to something, surely, like street lights

or surveillance cameras. A snapping

telephone. Bite! Bite! When the drought

sweeps back in and the dunnart hangs in

there on surfeit insects unbalanced,

drinking their blood. I will keep

the mental map of where I’ve seen them

to myself. Selfishness? Stepping cautiously.

I won’t call them “Gilbert’s dunnarts,”

as they’re not and never were, though

he plundered (“collected”) them for John

Gould, in whose name I belonged

to the naturalists’ club at primary school,

and raised four hundred dollars to save

birds and tortoises at Blue Gum Swamp.

 

3.

Young men buy up properties from their one-month

on, one-month off fly-in fly-out gigs on the mines.

They bring greed with them and turn ground inside out,

sucking what they can out of their month’s leisure.

It’s a good deal for the new world order which they’re

part of and embrace so compassion is latitude

the environment won’t bear: metaphor is worthless.

Like blank cigarette packets the brand inside still kills.

Sociologists can ride pillion to all of this but we

have to live within the fallout. Pietry (pious poetry)

is funded by ALCOA and BHP. Or the virus

that’s got inside, shuffling, switching and rearranging

birdsong so tune and lexicon don’t match visuals:

de-speciesisation and re-alignment, the “best of”

remade in the ultimate hack, all guidebooks

redundant forever, outside gadgets’ stock-taking.

 

4.

Louche always grabs its place, side-splitting

energy for its affirmation; or sidling furtive

as its calculated smile to take the prize

that we might not even recognise as having worth

but will eventually, when it shines loud

from Louche’s snappy pocket. To frolic

in heritage waste, supplant and replant

with nano-blasts of infiltration: their freedom,

their freedom, their choices imposed: ruminate

on that! And if you’re following the intertextual

narrative you’ll expect some kind of retaliatory

gesture. There is none. The regaining won’t happen

by our hands. Not even fingerprints remain.

 

5.

The half-fallen tree I am preparing to cut up,

saw into parts that will mewl in the firebox,

might be called a “limb” of the greater tree:

a horizontal rather than vertical take

on growth; I insist we discuss this

in terms of hemispheres and lobes,

of right sides telling left sides

and vice versa; I insist the immolation

of parts is called “incineration”

rather than warmth, mere warmth.

 

 

John Kinsella is the author of over thirty books of poetry and prose, including The New Arcadia and Peripheral Light.

[Click here to purchase your copy of Issue 07]

The Coondle Elegies

Related Posts

Leila Chatti

My Sentimental Afternoon

LEILA CHATTI
Around me, the stubborn trees. Here / I was sad and not sad, I looked up / at a caravan of clouds. Will you ever / speak to me again, beyond / my nightly resurrections? My desire / displaces, is displaced. / The sun unrolls black shadows / which halve me. I stand.

picture of dog laying on the ground, taken by bfishadow in flickr

Call and Response

TREY MOODY
My grandmother likes to tell me dogs / understand everything you say, they just can’t / say anything back. We’re eating spaghetti / while I visit from far away. My grandmother / just turned ninety-four and tells me dogs / understand everything you say. / They just can’t say anything back.