The Clenched Fist

When fingers intertwine and hands
harden into the ball, the fist,
the display of power and rebellion;
the display of victory and masculinity;
the futile displays of a society
engrossed by it’s own delusions of power.

The clenched fist waved,
threatening.
the clenched fist waved,
menacingly.
The clenched fist
shaken and shaking in rage;
Shaking with the morbid anger
this humanity has come to bear.

Such are the fingers, rolled into
that little futile ball of
little more than futile power.

The clenched fist, formed of clay,
from dust to dust
and of dust it remains.

There is no power displayed
by a fist shaking with rage;
Merely the want of power,
the desire and need for supremacy
induced by petty insecurity,
in a universe outside their world.
A want and desire fettering the owner
of the shaking arm to his own moribund ways.

Catherine Hill Bay

On a horizon, tainted by a faint sea-mist
A sleeping convoy lies; a convoy of coal ships.
Dormant in a morning’s light, these
Slumberous steel hulks await their turn
To come and load their bellies with the black
Of Catherine’s fossil fuel.

Somewhere north there lies the steelyards,
In a dirty industrial sprawl;
South, Munmorah’s chimney stacks,
Erect, and perilously tall,
Spew forth white fluffy plumes
Of smoke from burning Catherine’s Coal.

Macquarie’s waters, to the west, unseen,
But we know they’re there,
Beyond the hills of dry green bush
That flank our Catherine’s shores.
Though all’s irrelevant in the hush
Of the loud Australian Morn.

No hush, not loud, the tranquil white noise sound:
As wave upon wave and waves pound the rocks
And carve at the sands. What white and
Beauteous sands; I miss the smooth clean feeling
Of them sifting through my hands.

I miss the loud Australian Morning,
And the south Pacific’s crashing shores,
As etched in memory they remain,
The visions of those younger days
Spent basking alone in the humbling charm
Of the little town of Catherine Hill Bay.

Up the track, atop the hill,
Beyond the black coal stacks,
The main (and only!) street of Catherine Hill,
Its rustic (or run down?) but charmful cottages
Line both street sides, their tattered fences
Peeling paint, and verandas, welcoming.

A lone, black, gangly-legged dog comes out
To see who’s there. Plodded out into the road’s center
Took in an aimless whiff of air, crossed the road,
Sniffed again, but didn’t seem to care.
As the rest of the little mining town slowly began to stir,
And break the loud Australian hush of a glorious Pacific Morn.

Not so much a bay, as an arc of clean white sand,
Joining to north and south, two grassed, jutting headlands.
And the deep pacific blue, underneath an autumn sun;
And the steady roll of surf and tide,
The crisp salt air, and the screeching calls
Of the myriad gull’s along its perfect shore.

The love of Catherine, many men would possess,
But her innate challenge, two breeds of men accept:
The locals who work her mines, with their
Old coal-dusted hands and inescapable grime,
And an unchanged indifference that has
Allowed a world to pass, as
They retain a hint of another century’s charm.

The other, a young breed, new in man’s long past:
With sun-bleached hair, and sunglassed eyes,
Sun-bronzed skin, and four-wheel drives;
The surfer negotiates Catherine’s rugged trails
To take the challenge of riding her elusive waves;
Her solitude, her power, her waves.

That Catherine Hill Bay, my Catherine,
Her little lagoon and many caves,
Her bush and her flowers, fire trails,
And the hours and hours we spent together:
Catherine shall always remain, But that
Catherine Hill Bay is no longer.

Change

Change, sustenance of life;
Precursor of death.
Change, an historic marvel
Of teaching and learning
And the way.

In change there is stability.
In stability constant change.
In the fluxatious existence
That is the universe
Only change knows purity
And only change knows stability.

Nothing can be as forever would seem.
For only nothing can be forever, for
Forever is a void of time –
Devoid of time, though encompassing all
That time would encompass.

Life changes to death changes to life.
In change is stability and growth
For life and growth are but forms
Of this marvel change.

In a perfect world there is nothing.
For only nothing as we know it is pure
As we wish it. For in nothingness
Everything may exist, in purity.
In purity everything may transcend the
Mundane, transcend the remedial
Futility of the world.

History has taught and teaches us
That history continues in a flux
Of change. Change only in history
Has been stable. Both history past
And history future. Change only.

So why fear death or life or change?
Only change is pure, and only change
Can endure. Death is a part of history
Past, present and future.

Death is a part of all time. All paths,
All knowledge and all learning
Are encompassed in this death
Encompassing life.
Such as this may be, only those
Unafraid will know,
And change.

Oblation

My life the oblation.
My offering.
Offered to whom
In a feat of petty worship?
My life.
A petty product of
An inexcusable past:
This lifetime.
Not really the Life.
Never unto Death.

Home

A gum tree’s not the same without a kookaburra’s call,
And a bar’s not like a pub alive with Aussie drawl.
You can’t catch all the cobbers, hangin’ out an’ drinken’ booze,
And askin’ for a schooner here’s a battle ya’ gonna lose.

There’s no digger’s here to greet you with greeting full o’ cheer,
Gidday Mate ‘ow ya goin’?” ‘s what I like to hear.
And Hogesie’s not a God over here – he’s just a movie star,
And no-one knows who the hell Strop is, his ol’ sidekick galah!

And no-one loves a sunburnt country, but they all love Aussie ya see,
‘Coz Hoges comes on the telly, tellen’ ’em it’s the place to be!
Sure it’s a bonzer place it is – me name is mud if it ain’t –
And there’s never a dago, pommie or yank, that to go there, just can’t wait!

I love a sunburnt country, but I’m an Aussie, you know,
The land of sweeping plains, I reckon back there I’ll go.
The ragged mountain ranges, bit smaller than the ones here,
The droughts and flooding rains, but I prefer the weather clear.

Yeah, Dorothea Mackeller wrote that poem, “My country”
Sometimes I turn on the waterworks, ‘coz with it I agree.
And no-one ever heard the perils o’ Mick Ginger, Doreen and the Bloke,
When I try to culture these bloody yanks, I often give up hope.

Not one o’ these coots knows ‘oo Banjo is (Mr. Patterson I mean)
And tho ‘e snuffed it years ago, I ‘old ‘im in high esteem.
And ya got buckley’s of findin’ anyone who knows Henry Lawson’s name,
And the wobble board and Rolf Harris – ya chance is about the same.

Speakin’ o’ Rolf, what happened to him, his bush ballads and didgeridoo?
I ‘member ‘im well, the stories ‘e’d tell, and the paintin’s on walls that
‘e’d do.
And there’s Ginger Meggs and Pickering, and ‘is cartoons of the PM,
And all the House, and the Opposition – ‘struth, could ‘e draw them!

I used to think “White Christmas” was referen’ to the sand
On the beach behind me Nanna’s house, or up the caravan,
And who’d o’ thought that Vegimite could nowhere be found,
And me Auntie’s great pavlova – I miss those swirling mounds!

And nobody here gives two hoots about the Queen’s birthday.
But then again who in Aussie does? But at least it’s a holiday!
And who ever heard o’ playing footie with a helmet on ya head?
And all that bloody padding and on plastic grass as well!

No Eadies, Fultons, Rex Mossup’s, or whoever else you can name –
There’s no room for Aussies here in this Sporting hall of fame,
And the Chapels and the Lillies here are things in old churchyards
No wickets, stumps or bowlers – but there’s batters (if they are)!

And the Ashes or the Test Series don’t mean nothin’ at all
To these galah’s who use a bat that’s round when they play ball.
But a Big Ben pie with tomato sauce – favorite cricket ground tucker –
Is as popular here as weak yankee beer is back home in Australia.

And lifesavers here don’t do it for the love or for the sport,
No surf carnivals or Grant Kenny’s, they get paid to do their job.
But Aussie surfers are still world renowned for bein’ number one,
And the sailors aren’t far behind since they won that ugly cup.

Beaches here are dead ringers for home, but there’s somethin’ that doesn’t agree –
It’s the way the sun rises over the land and sets into the sea!
But I s’pose I never crossed the nullarbor, or been to W.A.,
So o’ course the sun’s gonna be different when it rises and sets that way.

And nothin’ comes near the Great Barrier Reef, or the coastal ports at home,
You know the likes o’ Sydney Opera House are world famous an’ well known.
And the coat-hanger across ol’ Port Jackson – a safe an’ massive thing,
Seems much more solid than this Golden Gate that looks like it’s made o’ string.

In Australia a two lane highway was pretty good if it was sealed.
Here six lanes is the least ya find, an’ there are never any lanes clear!
Sort o’ like havin’ a Pitt street all over the place, all the time,
Specially the way Pitt Street is in the arvo’s at about ‘alf five.

To make it worse they drive their cars on the wrong side o’ the road,
And everyone’s out to get you – it’s a bloody war out there you know.
And freeways turn into long car parks every day at about the same time –
All it takes is one good prang and you’ll be there all the bloomin’ night.

And amongst all this bloody traffic, not a panelvan around,
Not Hot FJ’s or old EH’s, not a Holden to be found,
But just like home there’s jap cars here, every where you think of,
But back in Oz we don’t have these huge Mercury’s, Caddilacs, or Lincolns.

These bloody sepo’s seem to do everything in a bigger, better (?) way,
And the cities are so much bigger, ya can’t see the light o’ day!
‘Coz the smog’s so thick, and buildings tall – urban jungle I think it’s called,
And lights and houses as far as you can see, but not enough room for all.

So they stack their houses atop each other, and call ’em condo’s, (you bet!)
‘Bit like flats, but you get to own ’em, and pay fees instead o’ rent.
Switches are all upside-down, and the powerpoints don’t have enough holes, And the loo is always in with the tub, gives me the willies, ya’ know.

Back in Australia we used the bathroom to have a bath you know,
The thunderbox or the dunny was where you went if ya had to go!
And the jumper me Mum knit for me, would keep me warm as toast,
Here you put on a sweater which sounds to me like you’re gonna roast!

And the people here are not too different – there’s every race and creed,
Just like any Aussie city, but there’s so bloody many cities here indeed!
Not too much is different, not too much the same
But I’ll always know, remember and love the land from which I came.

Phalanx

He bustled by the organism with the raincoat,
Quickly sidestepped the briefcase and umbrella,
Was shoved along inconsiderately by an arm
(Unharmed, but not where,
In this crowd, he wanted to be).
He harried through this phalanx of urban commuters.

His eyebeam dueled another for one eternal moment,
Before falling to the ground.

That mammal with the lipstick on
Hastened the pace of the moment
(Only of that moment)
Which had been denoted for duelling eyebeams,
Mutual surrendering of sight to the ground,
And a flurried indecisiveness of individual confidence.
(But stride, in opposite directions remain mutually unchanged.)

Now stern; now solemn.
Always indecisive.
Was that moment a loss or gain?
Had he smiled and said “Good Morning”
Would the eyebeams have searched
Instead of duelled?
Would that female have been compelled to issue reply?
Why is it that Humans look to the ground
On passing another of their kind?

Ants greet every other ant.

On he went. Tempted
And searching within for courage to be that
Happy person.
But the moment when the stockings
And stilettos passed
His eyebeams duelled his reason.
His emotion quarrelled his reason,
His eyebeams lost and turned away,
And again fell to the ground.

Smitten thus with his own lack of pride,
Reasoning too that he was unworthy to look upon such
Lovely legs, or sensuous smiles,
Or faces of bodies without introduction,
He must remain just another
Urban commuter,
Lost within the phalanx of bodies,
The suits, the brief cases and umbrellas;
An anonymous ticketholder.
Another anonymous ticketholder
On the next train.
And the next one,
And another one.

There Lies The Insignificance

Some say:
In a Death lies the insignificance of life,
For a Death brings the end of a life.

But I say:
In Life lies the insignificance of death,
For a death does not interrupt Life.

One Says

With one’s head in the sand,
With one’s hand on the heart,
The fist on the table,
One says:
The sand is uncomfortable.

With one’s head in the water,
One’s hand on the scrotum,
The fist pounding the table,
One says:
The water is cold.

With one’s head in the air,
One’s hands on the ears,
The feet on the ground,
One says:
The world is not good.

With one’s mind in the body,
One’s soul in the heart,
One’s thought in the world,
One says,
This body is bad.

One cannot be satisfied.

Millenia

We are deceived by horizons,
Which appear to us as an end,
But always keep the same distance
The closer we try to get.
And over this horizon we may see
Many other ships disappear,
But to our own horizon
Our own ship cannot go near.

So in our vain attempts
To see beyond that deceptive end,
The height of the mast of our
Little ship we then transcend,
Only to leave us more perplexed
When inevitably we find
The distance not nearer, but greater
To that all deceiving line.

So higher up and higher,
Higher still we go,
Until the whole of our ocean
We see unfold below.
And in its midst still traveling,
Our little ship is there,
But now seeing the whole globe of Earth,
Little for our ship do we care.

So higher still and higher,
Higher yet as we pass,
‘Till the whole of our solar system
Our sight may then encompass.
Higher yet still higher,
Higher till we may see,
Below and around us in glory,
A sea of galaxies.

Suddenly a fear does take us
As we realize and now know,
The insignificance of our little ship
Within its horizons so far below.
The awe and fear then takes us
Back down to our ship on the sea,
And knowing the vastness that lies beyond,
With our horizons we’re content to be.

It hurts us not to be aware
That far more unseen lies beyond;
And charts were made by those who’ve been
Before us, to keep us from going wrong.
But knowledge too far beyond ourselves
Can hinder us by making us lose all sight
Of the situation at hand, and navigation
Needed to sail our ship from its present plight.

* * *

We are deceived by a death
Which appears to us as an end
But seems to keep the same distance
The closer we seem to get.
And over this death we may see
Many other people disappear,
But to our own death
Our own self cannot get near.

So in our vain attempts
To see beyond that deceptive end
The height of our thinking
In this body we then transcend.
Only to leave us more perplexed
When inevitably we find
The distance not nearer, but greater,
To that all deceiving time.

So higher in thinking and higher
Above bodily thought we go,
Until the whole of our process of life
We see unfold below.
And in its midst still traveling
Our little body still is there.
But seeing the whole of the process of time
Little for our body we care.

So higher still and higher,
Higher consciousness as we pass,
‘Till all of the planes of existence,
Our vision may then encompass.
Higher yet, still higher,
Higher ’till we may be
All of existence all around us
Throughout this eternity.

Suddenly a fear does take us,
As we realize and now know,
The insignificance of our little body
Within its short life so far below.
The awe and fear then takes us,
Back down to material body.
And knowing the vastness that lies beyond
With this life we’re content to be.

It hurts us not to be aware
That far more unseen lies beyond,
And plans were made by those who’ve been
Before us, to keep us from going wrong.
But knowledge too far beyond ourselves
Can hinder us by making us lose all sight,
Of the life at hand, and nevigation needed
To take our spirit out of its present plight.

Fear of Height

We are deceived by horizons,
Which appear to us as an end,
But always keep the same distance
The closer we try to get.
And over this horizon we may see
Many other ships disappear,
But to our own horizon
Our own ship cannot go near.

So in our vain attempts
To see beyond that deceptive end,
The height of the mast of our
Little ship we then transcend,
Only to leave us more perplexed
When inevitably we find
The distance not nearer, but greater
To that all deceiving line.

So higher up and higher,
Higher still we go,
Until the whole of our ocean
We see unfold below.
And in its midst still traveling,
Our little ship is there,
But now seeing the whole globe of Earth,
Little for our ship do we care.

So higher still and higher,
Higher yet as we pass,
‘Till the whole of our solar system
Our sight may then encompass.
Higher yet still higher,
Higher till we may see,
Below and around us in glory,
A sea of galaxies.

Suddenly a fear does take us
As we realize and now know,
The insignificance of our little ship
Within its horizons so far below.
The awe and fear then takes us
Back down to our ship on the sea,
And knowing the vastness that lies beyond,
With our horizons we’re content to be.

It hurts us not to be aware
That far more unseen lies beyond;
And charts were made by those who’ve been
Before us, to keep us from going wrong.
But knowledge too far beyond ourselves
Can hinder us by making us lose all sight
Of the situation at hand, and navigation
Needed to sail our ship from its present plight.

* * *

We are deceived by a death
Which appears to us as an end
But seems to keep the same distance
The closer we seem to get.
And over this death we may see
Many other people disappear,
But to our own death
Our own self cannot get near.

So in our vain attempts
To see beyond that deceptive end
The height of our thinking
In this body we then transcend.
Only to leave us more perplexed
When inevitably we find
The distance not nearer, but greater,
To that all deceiving time.

So higher in thinking and higher
Above bodily thought we go,
Until the whole of our process of life
We see unfold below.
And in its midst still traveling
Our little body still is there.
But seeing the whole of the process of time
Little for our body we care.

So higher still and higher,
Higher consciousness as we pass,
‘Till all of the planes of existence,
Our vision may then encompass.
Higher yet, still higher,
Higher ’till we may be
All of existence all around us
Throughout this eternity.

Suddenly a fear does take us,
As we realize and now know,
The insignificance of our little body
Within its short life so far below.
The awe and fear then takes us,
Back down to material body.
And knowing the vastness that lies beyond
With this life we’re content to be.

It hurts us not to be aware
That far more unseen lies beyond,
And plans were made by those who’ve been
Before us, to keep us from going wrong.
But knowledge too far beyond ourselves
Can hinder us by making us lose all sight,
Of the life at hand, and nevigation needed
To take our spirit out of its present plight.