Mascara Literary Review

Issue Two - October 2007

Judith Beveridge

Judith Beveridge has published three books of poetry all of which have won major prizes: The Domesticity of Giraffes (Black Lighting Press 1987); Accidental Grace, (UQP, 1996) and Wolf Notes (Giramondo Publishing, 2003). She is the poetry editor of Meanjin. In 2005 she was awarded the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal for excellence in literature. She currentlyteaches poetry at post-graduate level at the University of Sydney and at post-graduate and undergraduate level at the University of Newcastle. She has edited UQP’s The Best Australian Poetry 2006 as well as co-edited anthologies from the Newcastle Poetry Prize, Sunweight (2005) and The Honey Fills the Cone (2006).

 

The Book
There is a fish called flower of the wave
and a fish called the hardyhead. There is 
the parrotfish, the pineapple fish, the boarfish 
the bullhead shark. There's the rough flute
mouth, the toothy flathead, the two spot 
bristle tooth and the yellow sabretooth blenny. 
At night I study. At night I learn sixty-two 
types of wrasse. I learn there's the glass fish, 
the globe fish, the goat fish and an eastern 
and southern gobble guts, both left-eyed
and right-eyed flounders, a rhinoceros
file fish, a racoon butterfly fish, a grub fish, 
a tear-drop sleeper goby, a robust pygmy 
star-gazer and a half and half puller. There's
a fish called happy moments. But I haven't 
found it yet. I haven't found the right one.
The name I can throw back at Davey when 
in a voice flat as oil, he calls me: "sweetlips".
 
Despite
Despite a headache, stationary all day, unable to decay; 
despite these reels ticking again into the gradient 
of each throb; my eyes feeling as fragile as snow-domes 
in the hands of a fractious child; my head grading all 
the grains of sand shunted southwards again by a week 
of black katabatic winds; despite the yachts tinkling, 
calling like knives on goblets for silence as the tide 
dumps another load of kelp around my head – I feel 
happy, calm; and for a moment I love the feel of hessian 
weather on my arms and legs. I love being with Davey 
who smells like an old fish trough, stubble on his chin 
sharp as wrasse's teeth.  I love the lighthouse on the cliff-top 
as it holds the stupefied position of a pocket chesspiece. 
I know another distress flare might soon find its passage 
through the nerves my head manipulates, that an onshore 
of jagged air push isobars back; that lightning's filamented 

pulse rig more cordage for my head. I know the veins 
in my head will tighten, distort, bend again like lines 
trying to dislodge a snag, that nausea will head for a dry 
berth in my throat – but now, I fix my bait, spit out my beer 
as if it had become as tasteless as the brackish Baltic 
and I reel my line in. I know the creels must come in despite 
blood on the charts, the pounding of cruel encephalitic winds. 
I drag the rod back, it arcs like a dolphin scudding on its tail, 
and I'm happy, calm, fishing again here with Davey. 
We're almost doing the limbo bringing our lines in.