Monday 27 February 2012

I Will





I am th' passenger
n I ride
n I write
n what will I ride about
this morning?
I'll write my will
I will
To my darlink undigested wife
I'll leave my every dying breath
for her
the last pumpings of my heart
my uncontrolled and thumping essence
the last traces ov a smell
my complete and yearning everything
for her
the total package of my life
To my beloved loved son
I leave
That handsome head of handsome curls and
That fishing mag I made him
Those happy days upon the riverbank
He knows
To my beloved loved lovely grrrls
I leave
My sweets, my shyness blushing nice-iness
My sometimes
Hey-you-a-bleedin-cop-r-somethun? attitude
when out raged and
That extra, extra-special gift
the magical ability to communicate
with cats
GET OFF MY LAWN
And to the dog
I leave my cap
My other hat he chewed
He might as swell
Go on n ate it all now
I'll write my will
I will
I won't
No, not today

Wednesday 28 December 2011

remaining




I am a passenger
n beside me
a besuited legal gentleman is reading a stapled
document n I cannot help but overlook
(the respondent rejected the request of the applicant)
Och well now,
I am a passenger n
I saw her standing there
I have seat an she has none
Her huncomfortable handle hanging
and her hexpectin'
and stagnant on the bus
So I got up and axed her
offered her
You can take MY seat madam
(beside the legal gentleman)
No she violent
She stood n shook and glared
and I sat down
sat back down again
reddener
She wasn't stagnant
No not pregnant
And her hexpecting nothing but to
Continue remaining fat
a big big, big-boned girrl.

Sunday 18 December 2011

old lady




I am a passenger n
this Old lady
she sits besides me
Hexcited to be on th' bus
She wants to talk
I want to read
Oh! What a beautiful morning!, she sez
My husband
I have a son in Canberra
It's the parking
I don't drive as much as I used to
My eyes are not that good
But he tells me, Mum, don't
It was at least six feet long
He had the most beautiful laugh
That was in the war you know
Passed away recently, she sez
I want to read
That was in the olde days, of course, she sez
I only have my cat now, she sez
I put the book away
I tell her about the cats
For although unlike some other peoples
I'm not that mad fond ov cats
Tho' the cats they seem fond enough ov me
Perhaps bizcoz I stink ov fish
They're allus coming over
To say hello and sniff
Rub themselves agin me
Catch a stroke
Wi' tails like the indian rope trick
Naked holes
Like the dot off an exclamation! mark
We saved this orphan baby kitty onced
Nobody's chile
Dying of starvation and total ate alive wi fleas
It wouldn't eat
So I called it Bobby Sands
I didn't think he'd mind
Wrapped it in a blanket
And forced fed it with a syringe
It recovered to become a great big lump
She nodded and agreed
I've taken you from your book, she sez
No, no, not at all
Look, the harbour bridge

not do that




I am a passenger
upon the bus
n this woman I sits next to
Woman sez to me, she sez
Can you not do that?
Not do what?
Can you not use your lapstock on th' bus
The flickerinks of the screen
You see
It gives me a hedgeache
It gives you a hedgeache?
Yes
If you don't mind
But I do mind, missus
I feel like screening at her
But I am a passenger n I is allus polite
So I move anyway away
Across the aisle and continue
to ride
And at the next stop she is enjoined
by a bleeping beeping beat-bhoy
whose tinny drum n bass leaks loudly
She leans aginst th window
Throbbink

I believe in Christmas leave




Christmas eve n
I believe in Christmas leave
whole half day in the office
end then
from Ho's Dim Sim
a great big bag ov pork steamed buns
for the th' wee'uns
and on ahead towards home
O! The gorgeous Glory ov it
A L90 from down on George St thonder
and it likes the city, completely empty
just the happy driver and myself
and she as anxious as myself
to thunder out and further on
towards the summer's heat
on too those happiest Northern beaches
G'wan ye girl ye!
She would beat a Palm Beach Masserati!
Full power L90 all the way
Over the Bridge and up through Mosman
on twowards the Spit
ahead a evening stroll on Dee Why's promenade gelato
drag an esky to Long Reef
sheltered soft boards at Collaroy
to sit and eat the world's best spies
Chicken and asparagus, steak and cheese
a mexicano

In Narrabeen a peppered pelicano preens
up on the lampost
hides head beneath its swing
gawk beaked and yellow eyed
it stoops to read the signs
no fishing from the bridge - perhaps for locals only?
Hammer down and on ahead
We'll make the Scoatland island dog race yet
Our mongrel brute he just won't swim
but beJasus I will
Blue with mangrove muck and oyster cuts
and completely entirely happy out
among the two thin wadda
Warriewood and round the bend
Stretching the bendy bus ahead
To touch and reach
Our very own sacred Bongin Bongin Beach
and Oh! The Joy! To bathe amongst those rays
Whose flappink wings uncover the sunken beauties of the bay
the darting whiting, the silvered bream
Like a wheelbarrow, it's all before us
And as we sweep through Mona Vale
bottles shopped n sushi stuffed
turbo downhill and through the lights
rolling past twin shining servos
We're leaving the Office World far behind
Ahead lies the farther reaches of the beaches
this bus is bound for glory
Newport, Bilgola, Avalon and all the way to Palmie
Time to ring the bell, collect yer parcels and salute the driver
Thanks! And a Merry Christmas to ya, mate!
for this stop is where I start to take my leave...




Thursday 15 December 2011

naw, not really


I am a passenger
up on th' bus
n I move my bag
to let this other gent sit down
he thanks me
but I state
och now, no bother, mate
What part of Scotland are you from? He axes
Glasgow izzit?
Ah'm no fae Scoatland
Irish me
Sorry now, he sez, I thought
No dramas, mate. I'm very often times confused
We're very close apart
Sound very much the same
I've heard
mind dew, that's
the very one thing that I have here
the worstest trouble wi here
iz that no buddy can hunderstand me
can't mick out a word I say
exspecially on the phone
the wife she sez – and they can hunnerstann
her italiano quite plain – you muss
speak slower lentamente and pronunciate
not jist slabber hon
Heh
In the shops now I jist usually point
doan even try to talk.

I see, he said.
Well, I have relatives in Ballycastle,
do you know it?
Me? Naw, not really.

spindly


Across the darking evening bus
There sits a thin question markage ov a man
asleep
His spindly back full curvage round
too dripped a head
right down upon
his flatly opened book
the short story ov a broken neck
White corporation shirt,
grey tie, black slacks
Steel rim eyed hexhaustion
He looks so tired of reading
And sitting straight
N so he sorely bends
and painful dreams
of crookedness