Mascara Literary Review

Issue One - April 2007

Keri Glastonbury

Keri Glastonbury is a lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Newcastle. She completed a Doctorate in Creative Arts at University of Technology, Sydney, in 2005. Her thesis, titled ‘Shut up nobody wants to hear your poems!’, staged a friendly title bout between painter Adam Cullen and poet Ted Nielsen, two male grunge auteurs of her generation. She has published two books of poetry, Hygienic Lily (Five Islands Press, 1999) and super-regional (Vagabond, 2001) and has an unpublished manuscript 'Grit Salute' (2004). She is an editor of the small publishing company, Local Consumption Publications (www.localconsumption.com) who are this year releasing the title Strawberry Hills Forever by Vanessa Berry.

 

 

 

 

hygienic italy 

‘but are you social nexus or cultural interstice? 
that’s the type of question the tour guides 
won’t answer’ 
  
Ted Nielsen, ‘Pax Romana’.					( effusive: 
you’d like to be differently enculturated, though in the end 
there’s a charm in being in relation to yourself, irrespective 
like age, that won’t excuse anyone—& yet, tonight 
you fell in love with her impeccable rendition of rebellion 
so braced, like a sleek carriage with a hybrid accent 
acquired abroad. you, all the while, way too verbal 
is it really freeform? even the american was grounded, smoothly 
modulated, listening to your mental garbage cleansing—as the 
roman sky turned cobalt blue against the mustard church 
you’re surrounded by new exteriors & too many saints 
as suddenly all your tropes seem so maligned—being gentle with 
yourself to coax the high down 
what a lot of english you can sprout					
							( hygienic italy: 
pigeons and satellite dishes occupy the event horizon 
across vast condominium rooftops 
perhaps fluttering anti-angels leave the basilica 
for the smashed terracotta hill of testaccio 
or form emergent, from the grunge and gravitas 
but are they, even ala 
laurie anderson, luce iragary, jorie graham 
your ideal intermediatries? 
at a point where art & money cleave together 
or apart, a plaque on the wall tries to unite 
in new ideas and faith in talent 
heralding all our smug alterities (eg: poems) 
a situated intelligence 
which leaves you to gesticulate on the streets 
the mastery of repeating language acquisition 
something else you always yawned at, until now 
a sonorous cipher, you wish—along with a fiat cinque cento 
          for hooting around
							( bella figura:
 the driver in pigtails and furs tries ardently 
to elicit more than physiognomy’s silent science 
the movement of the car naturalising the city streets 
to a point of cathexis that never arrives 
trouncing your fledgling accretion process 
your fringe mown in an attempt at suburban sharp 
& more like, a member of hush. you sense 
you’re surrounded by voracious readers & translators 
not afraid to overshoot the mark.. so, it’s preferable 
to internal monologues, or the self-deprecations 
of the ‘performative’ you’re used to 
  
or cowering in the face of the high femme 
once summer breaks out the mini-skirts 
followed by a joke about trains full 
of perfumed boys playing pocket billiards
							( 3rd rate hotel:
a sandy rain, born devotional 
roughs a sirocco sky like stone wash 
while you’re breaking the settee 
of arts council fantasy you believe it 
when she says rome’s been spoilt 
post the 60s but let’s not get glib 
there’s always memory studies 
and expatriate experts even angels 
have right wings as if a counter-reformation 
on traffic infringements might start 
a spate of double-parking in perth 
her sister-in-law as howler monkey 
so it bothers us, like passive smoking 
the botticelli’s so blanchett 
& woo, i’m feeling so bohemian like you
							( justified & ancient:
a slumped angel 
           headstone and gramsci’s grave 
find you among the conifers 
           & a posthumous library 
weighted by voluminous spines 
     & a short shelf-life 
           a shift to the affective level 
getting your attention 
           like heavy handed art house 
  
reading old books 
           has you surprised to learn 
the dog ‘shat’ in the tucker box 
  
though for the most part 
           you remain disengaged as a cabby 
on imperial administrative interests 
           driving home the episteme
							( carravagio:
a rapid summer downpour, street’s full of motorini 
horns and sirens, while you’re buffeted along 
plateau upon plateau—jargon relative 
as rabbiting on, whatever else concomitant with that 
one day molar, next molecular—illuminated manuscript 
or subcontracted signwriter, THE DAY OF JUDGEMENT 
in 500 point georgia bold—a question of flow 
god is a vector monster, remaining beneath, above 
& within the product—or just shot through 
your spiritual highs make you reach for the love addiction guide 
as you will the lines closer together, into a thrumming scaffolding 
no grumpy bastard could use to translate or reproduce 
later, rain sprinkling in through the roof’s natural shower rose 
wandering home from the family palazzo, the etonian accent 
of the prince roller-skating round the ballroom 
the squeamish pope in red ‘too real’—& st john the baptist 
in nomenclature only, a wry tuft of adolescent pubic hair 
soft, as upholstered walls in genovese velvets
							( brava:
infused by gradients of atmosphere, as the city’s spring 
makes the laundromat cheery and deferred purchasing 
limns the shopfronts, a threshold away from murano glass 
and your exquisite ambivalence. the street’s pock marks 
the pique arousals. poor pride, as well as prada 
street vendors assuming you’re nordic, demure, pure 
& full of forgetting in the self-image quiz show 
things just playing out, remnants of the 
feminine, adjusting your antenna—to appreciate 
bras and leather goods in the windows 
wondrously—& no magazines have colonised 
the space you are in. you won’t enter the stores 
and cultural discretion will thrive on these glimpses 
the body there, but you’re not in the driver’s seat 
perhaps you thought it was the passenger side