Thursday, September 1, 2011

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

Fear Of Darkness

A serial novel by Joe Lake.

(So far: Julie’s husband has had an accident, after which he disappears. At the police station the next morning, in the two-way mirror over the counter, Julie sees the door open by itself and when she looks, a young couple enter. “Vampires,” she thinks but is told that it is a trick of the light. Next, the campervan is back at Cooee and she wakes to find her husband in bed with her and notices two marks on her neck.)

She wonders about the two scab marks because they are itching. Just then the mobile phone rings. She picks it up.

“Good morning, I hope you slept well,” says an amicable deep male voice. “You’ll have to wear dark glasses in future. I also left some strong sunscreen lotion on your table in the kitchen. You must put that on. It’s not easy to be immortal. I’ll see you both this evening. In the meantime, continue your lives as usual but don’t move out of Cooee for now. Again, I say, welcome.”

Julie had no chance to answer.

Bob was putting the kettle on. “Who was that?”

“Someone who said that we are immortal and to put sunscreen on, and wear dark glasses.

“Immortal? I wish! It would be nice to live forever. The fellow must be mad. Where did you meet him?”

“He seems to know me.”

“You stay in bed. I’ll make the breakfast. French toast? Of course, that’s your favourite. That reminds me, we’ll have to fill up the gas bottles.”

Julie didn’t reply at first, then said, “Do you remember anything of the last two days? My eyes have become unfocused and everything before me is floating as if I were a bird hovering on the ceiling of the van. I’ve had this experience in dreams when I was young. I used to fly over landscapes like a bird. I’d have my arms outstretched as if they were wings and I could feel them flapping, gentle and powerful. I read that flying signifies a sexual experience but I never believed it. Perhaps seeing the two people at the police station who had no mirror image was a dream and I’m still in it?”

“Look at the facts, dear,” Bob said, “I’m making French toast. That’s not a dream, more like a nightmare even though I’m the best French toast maker in this caravan...”

“You are, or were, especially when you don’t fry them to a crisp and make the sunny-side-up egg into inedible rubber,” Julie countered.

“You must have eaten something that upset your stomach, that’s why you have these fantasies about invisible people.”

Julie kept her silence, then pondered, “All the world’s an illusion. We may even be holograms projected from somewhere outside the universe, I heard once.”

“I wish we were immortal,” Bob said, “but I wouldn’t like to pay a price for it, though.”

(To be continued next month.)

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

It’s still winter in Tasmania and today I saw the first blossoms. Actually, the moment I get used to the cold, which is relative, of course, spring and summer arrives and we have sunshine and warmth for nine months. I’ve begun to think positive.

Vi Woodhouse is back from her operation and she will be at our concert at the gallery.

I’ve written some more poems but it’s always the next one that will be the definitive one but never is.

I wish you all a happy blossom time and lots of warmth in your heart.

A Sonnet

A balanced breath may be life’s happiness,

Where one escapes the punishments of life,

To try to melt away and so be blessed,

Because we’re lucky just to be alive.

We wish for worldly goods and sell our soul,

To find that when we bow we start to kneel,

When all we need and want is find a goal,

Like perfect food and house and rock-star’s zeal.

But nothing is as good as it appears

And one can dream one’s dreams and

just pretend,

As the too-happy clowns may hide their tears;

Pretend a smile that changes with intent.

But perfect happiness and its content

Will always raise some envy - to lament.

© Joe Lake

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

That Hat

On The Tube, man,

Where did you get that hat, man?

You in the bowler,

Travelling to the city, man,

In the hand-made suit,

And the fashion shoes,

And the tailored overcoat,

And that hat,

Oh, where did you get that hat?

You staring through train windows,

Watching nothing,

Pretending we don’t exist, man,

On The Tube,

Metropolitan Line -

Uxbridge to Rayners Lane,

And change for the Piccadilly,

On to Knightsbridge,

You with the leather briefcase,

And that hat,

Smoking a classy cigarette,

We high on living, man,

On drugs and sex, and music, man,

You in shiny black shoes,

Rounded toe and shoelaces,

Not with it, man,

Oh, where did you get that hat?

Was it Selfridge’s or Harrods's,

Yeah, Harrods for a haircut,

And a hat,

We live on The Underground,

You just use it,

China cups and teapot,

I’m a teapot, I’m a teapot, man!

From the privileged belt,

Where green meets concrete, artificial,

To the city, man,

Tottenham Court Road,

Sloane Square, Googe Street,

Who goes to White City on Central Line?

We do, man,

On The Tube, day and night,

Not you, man, not in that hat -

Oh, where did you get that hat?

© Michael Garrad August 2011

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

Grab the moment - it’s more than money can buy. In fact, it’s priceless!

It’s the moment when strangers meet, when casual acquaintances catch up, when friendships are renewed. It’s all about making that microcosm of time count for the maximum, for it may never come again.

So many of us are too pre-occupied to take notice, or we feel awkward in this new environment. Grasp the challenge, take the risk!

Reaching out costs nothing and what’s the worst that happens? Yes means yes? No means no? Yes means no? No means yes? We’re just people - and people need people, as the song goes.

Better the risk than being too cautious.

A moment can be lost because we spend too much time thinking and analysing, and quick as blink we slot right back into what is comfortably re-assuring. In other words, we don’t do anything!

The moment can change a way of life, or not. But it’s worth going for, anyway!

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

Fine Art Auction

You’re at a fine art auction

for art works of great worth.

The bidding will be lively,

objects d’art can cost the earth.

Your auctioneer calls the bids

at five hundred words a minute,

there is no time to cogitate -

wave your card to just stay in it.

The atmosphere’s electric,

your adrenalin’s in full surge,

for buying is addictive;

a basic-feel urge.

Eventually the hammer falls

and your bid has most noughts.

Now you need to figure what to do

with whatever you’ve just bought!

Display it in the lounge at home,

until you’re moved into aged care?

But there won’t be any room

for you to have it with you there,

so bequeath it to the youngsters,

before you kick the pail,

or they’ll cash it in for several bucks

at the clearance garage sale!

© Pete Stratford 21.6.11

Tasmanian Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

Jungle Magic

My favourite childhood book was lost long ago,

But the story’s vivid images are painted on my mind,

And as I turn the pages of my memory I see -

Waterfalls tumbling from high rocky ledges,

Splashing silver stars into the stream’s whirling pool below,

Monkeys leaping from tree to tree, engaging in daily chatter,

Gnomes, goblins and elves hiding beneath huge leafy canopies -

(No doubt planning a mischievous fate for intruders),

Spiders as large as saucers, swinging precariously on jewelled webs,

Myriad white butterflies with diaphanous wings,

fluttering everywhere

Like snowflakes -

And the whole jungle drips with rain.

Do children of today believe magic still exists -

Apart from the kind found in Harry Potter movies?

I suppose gnomes are way out of fashion,

Except perhaps those standing in nurseries and

gardens -

Unhappily mute in their stone images,

And as for elves and goblins - they are not “cool”,

But vampires, blood and death, are in favour -

What a sad, troubled world we now live in!

© June Maureen Hitchcock

Europa Poets' Gazette No 89

On This Anzac Morn

I stand here reverently, tall and proud,

Watching on in silence.

The crowd gathers as one,

A testament to our countrymen,

Ordinary people who gave their lives

On a foreign shore.

I stand here reverently, tall and proud,

I pause to wonder why.

“How did these men do what they did?”

But I already know -

To defend those whom they love,

so far from home.

I stand here reverently, tall and proud,

So honoured, so inspired.

The sun has risen to light the dawn,

And shine upon us all

Their sacrifice remembered,

On this Anzac Morn.

© Declan Fahey 27.4.2011