Mascara Literary Review

Issue Five - June 2009

Geoff Page

Geoff Page is an Australian poet who has published eighteen collections of poetry as well as two novels, four verse novels and several other works including anthologies, translations and a biography of the jazz musician, Bernie McGann. He retired at the end of 2001 from being in charge of the English Department at Narrabundah College in the ACT, a position he had held since 1974. He has won several awards, including the ACT Poetry Award, the Grace Leven Prize, the Christopher Brennan Award, the Queensland Premier’s Prize for Poetry and the 2001 Patrick White Literary Award. Selections from his work have been translated into Chinese, German, Serbian, Slovenian and Greek. He has also read his work and talked on Australian poetry in throughout Europe as well as in India, Singapore, China, Korea, the United States and New Zealand.

 

Ruminations

for Marie Dacke

 

1.

Though not a happy clapper, I

still praise the filigree of things,

those traceries of fine connections,

the way my friend in Lund

established in her PhD

that certain clever beetles here

(and all about the globe)

employ the moon to navigate,

rolling out their spheres of dung

in straight lines from the mother lode

to feast on unopposed.

 

2.

I praise how they've ensured that I,

surrounded by the wide Monaro

(its slownesses of sheep and cattle),

can sit here in a coffee bar,

enveloped by the summer air

and, toying with my cappuccino,

measure out these lines for you

untroubled by a fly.

 

3.

But, then again, I have to think

about those pesky flies,

classified by Carl Linnaeus

(1758),

a genus that's done 65

million circuits round the sun —

and so to those Monaro cattle,

obliging both the fly and beetle

(the Musca and its moonshine rival)

with all the manna of their dung,

those cattle with their destinations ...

protein with a price per kilo.

 

4.

Not a simple story really —

but let's not spoil a cappuccino.

We tinker with our tinkering,

horologists at work (with eyepiece)

and smile at how we do not hear

the hoofprints in the room.

 

 

Allegro

 

We are gathered in a room

for violin and piano:

two young female Swiss musicians

 

and fifty-five or so of us

convened by invitation,

waiting for the strings

 

to variously be bowed and struck.

I let my eye run down the program:

dates of birth and dates of death;

 

that hyphen in between.

So much a small mark may reveal

expanded on the stave.

 

Outside, through the picture window,

a last sun shows the rhododendrons

as, suddenly, in this still moment

 

I see the room fill up with death:

the slowness of a lifetime's cancer;

a final swearword on the freeway;

 

the cloudy whirling of a sky

around the heart attack.

The options ramify like roots

 

out into the room,

fingers thinning into nothing.

Conceivably, we'll go together,

 

one death wrought from light and sound,

a man quite suddenly among us,

his coat too heavy for the weather.

 

The first piece starts; they're blonde and gifted —

and not without some humour.

Conducting us by choice and voice

 

across two centuries of Europe,

they're celebrating all those hyphens

between the bookends birth and death.

 

We know, of course, the one date only —

although a few are stooped perhaps

with what their doctor's said already.

 

Those last four digits grow remote,

as if immeasurably deferred

by what we're hearing in the strings.

 

Struck or bowed, each note sustains us

even as it shouts or whispers

rumours of the end.

 

 

                             

The Swoop
 

Every day

it has to happen.

Why is it that with

so much ease

a magpie sweeps

in front of you

as if connecting

up two trees?

  

You're doing 60

kph;

it makes its long low

easy swoop

as if to laz-

ily complete

some half-arsed sort of

loop the loop.

 

It's graceful, yes,

but snooty, too;

you hear a brain of

thimble size

declaring in a

quiet hauteur,

You're much too easy

to despise,

  

you shadow in your

shiny car.

Can you hope to

equal this?

Whether you

speed up or brake,

your bumper bar

will always miss.