Mascara Literary Review

Issue Five - June 2009

Nathanael O'Reilly

A dual Australian-Irish citizen, Nathanael O'Reilly was born in Warrnambool and raised in Ballarat, Brisbane and Shepparton. He has lived in England, Ireland, Germany, Ukraine and the United States, where he currently resides. His poetry has appeared in numerous journals, including Antipodes, Postcolonial Text, Transnational LiteratureProsopisia, Blackmail Press and Southern Ocean Review.

 

 

The Hills of Bendigo

 

For Sean Scarisbrick

 

We spent the summer of ninety-two

In the hills of Bendigo

Living in a colonial house

Replete with a croquet lawn,

A ballroom, servant’s quarters,

A wine cellar, an in-ground pool

And a deep, dark verandah

Overlooking an acre of grounds

Scattered with pine needles,

Stone benches and rose bushes.

 

Home from uni on summer holidays,

We lived on my parent’s charity.

After sleeping past midday

In a room with burgundy velvet curtains

And foot-thick stone walls,

Days were spent swimming in the pool

Seven steps and a leap from our beds,

Reading Eliot, Salinger and Hardy

In the shade on the verandah,

Writing long letters to girls

We thought we knew and loved,

Listening to U2, Van Morrison,

And Hunters & Collectors, always

Getting a kick out of the line

“Way out back in Bendigo.”

 

When the heat was bearable

We walked over the hills

Along winding goat-track streets

Left over from the goldrush,

Discovering tiny pubs,

No more than front rooms

Of miner’s cottages,

Occupied by old blokes

In op-shop three-piece suits

Perched precariously

On vinyl bar stools.

Old Jimmy fished a battered

Harmonica from his waistcoat

Pocket, shook out the saliva

And puffed out a wheezy tune,

His narrow shoulders hunching

As the condensation slid

Down the side of his pot of VB.

 

Some days we walked to the mall,

After passing the oval, the Art Gallery,

The high school and the park,

Browsed countless racks of CDs

We couldn’t afford at Brash’s,

Left our sweaty fingerprints

On Thrasher and Rolling Stone

Under the disapproving glare

Of the Chinese newsagent,

Took refuge in the Public Library

Where we flipped through LPs,

Discovering Klaus Wunderlich

And His Amazing Pop Organ Sound.

 

Evenings were spent at home

Drinking my parents’ wine,

Eating thick slabs of cheese

Grilled on toast while watching

Day-night cricket matches on telly.

Or, if the Austudy hadn’t run out,

Drinking Carlton Draught downtown

In the Shamrock Hotel or the Rifle Brigade,

Playing pool and the jukebox,

Bullshitting about the great things

We would do after finishing uni,

What we would do for a living,

Where we would live,

Where we would go on holidays,

Which girls we would sleep with.

 

At night we wandered through the hills

Drinking from the silver bladder

Ripped from a box of Coolabah Riesling,

Unable to sleep in the January heat.

We took turns waiting on the swings

In the park across from the Milk Bar,

While you or I made reverse-charge

Calls from a Telecom phone box

With shattered glass and AC/DC graffiti.

Afterwards, we went back to the house

For more grilled cheese on toast,

More chilled wine, and conversations

That lasted into the early hours

And echo through the years.