Mascara Literary Review

Issue Seven May 2010

Solrun Hoaas

Solrun Hoaas spent formative years in China and Japan. She discovered theatre as a student in Oslo and Kyoto, where she also trained as a Noh mask maker. An award-winning film-maker, her work was experimental, exploring cross-cultural themes. Her short film At Edge was a discovery of the Australian bush through the eyes and voice of the poet Judith Wright. The film can be purchased from Ronin http://www.roninfilms.com.au/feature/753.html Solrun submitted work to Mascara Literary Review four months before her death in December 2009. This is the bio she submitted to our editors:

Melbourne-based Solrun Hoaas has returned to poetry after years of filmmaking. Her poems appear in Going Down Swinging , Holland 1945, Arabesques Literary Review, Softblow Poetry and Writing Macao.  

 

http://www.innersense.com.au/mif/hoaas.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Tailor from Noumea

 

My favorite winter coat

was made by a tailor from Noumea

at ninety-four, yellow cravat

beret cheekily cocked, crooked smile

wide as a welcome.

 

My coat one of a kind

patchwork of the finest fabrics

remnants from a factory long closed

midnight blue and grey wool blends

mustard suede for rubbing elbows

elegantly tailored, inside pockets

lining stitched with equal care.

 

The pattern was his own design

fashioned for civilian internees

sent from the northern pearling towns

and scattered Pacific islands

to incarceration at chilly Tatura.

Undaunted, he set up a sowing factory

for women in the camp, and there

the coats were made, all uniform

in maroon-dyed heavy wool,

to keep them warm through five

or more long wartime winters.

 

The tailor himself, born a Japanese,

was shipped  from New Caledonia

his first involuntary visit to Australia

as a civilian, but  enemy alien.

A lifetime business left behind,

his French no currency here,

he made the best of his confinement.

 

And when the war was over,

and he was ‘repatriated’ – not home,

but to impoverished Japan, a stranger there,

he started up again, stich by stich,

his handwritten sign in Yokohama,

still there –

‘Murayama, Tailleur Elegant.’

He had retired, but showed me around

the remains of his small factory,

ends of fabric still on the shelves.

 

One day a heavy coat arrived by mail.

A tailor-made Tatura model, lined and

multicoloured in thirteen different fabrics.

 

I wear it often, cloaked in memories of

his cheeky smile,  wide as a welcome,

and tales of proud resilience

to injustice, his story still  untold.

 

 

The Key

 

I am standing at a castle.

There is a map of an archipelago.

This is where I want to go.

The quickest way to get there

is to sail around the world.

I try to open the door of the castle,

but can’t work out which key to use.

There are so many on my key ring.

A Eurasian girl walks past and

opens it for me. Easily.

She has her own key, bent in a V,

and shows me how it fits

in the hole. She hands me

her key and a guidebook.

I step through the door.

I am standing on a cliff

with a steep drop to the sea.

A man and a child were with me

and have gone back down.

They called me. I didn’t answer.

Wonder if the old walls might crumble.

 

 

The Platform

 

I should have been dead at eight

if logic governs destiny.

A heavy wooden platform fell on me

in the camelia garden at Aotani.

But maybe many years ago,

before a war had devastated

a thriving shipping port

and the ruined owners of a

Swiss-style Japanese mansion 

were forced to sell my childhood home,

their platform held an orchestra,

violinists, sax and piano players,

as guests flirted and danced.

 

Why it was propped up outside

along the wall I still don’t know.

Most days it held up God’s word,

sermon, cross and organist.

As often, it was my incurable

curiosity that got me into strife. I pried

a wooden stopper loose at  base.

Precarious already, the platform toppled.

I still remember the thud, the cries,

the breath squeezed out of me.

My mother’s amazement that

I was not dead, not even a tiny rib

crushed with the sudden impact.

‘She’s a tough little girl,’ they said.

But even now I hear the gasp,

a moment when breath was suspended

and feel  the ponderous weight

of that preacher’s platform

crushing down on me.

What  music of ancient delight

was it, that carried and  lifted its weight?

 

My algae

 

1.

My nights are star sand

sifting too slowly

through the hourglass

of diminishing dreams.

 

They could cut through

a mangrove forest once,

clearing a path to

a shimmering source.

 

Now, haunted by hollow accounts

and birds of credit pecking

at each lidless moment,

capturing the pitiful sandman.

 

Nothing left by morning but

drained waking and

marinated memories,

the shamisen serenades

of a tousle-headed fisherman

with a towel around his head,

who says,  ‘You’re hard

to take with chopsticks.’

                                                        

2.

Peardrops on eyelids

swollen with purple curses

persimmon percussion,

the taste of tart  guitarstrings                        

too taut, snapped

brittle as bone ballads,

a yellow weeping violin

harmonizing with

the azure blue smells

of early morning

synthesis of sleepless nights.

 

 

3.

Bones of flimsy fibres,

my algae entwine the body

locking it in a brutal embrace,

every step inviting a bolt

of lightning to strike jolting

flames into tender joints.

 

Better sing for your breakfast

than beat your head

against the bedstead,

waking fibrous with myalgia.