Jun 29 2006

Two other things

1. One of my Melbourne Uni colleagues, Meg Mundell, has written one of the best articles I’ve seen in recent years about bisexuality for The Age. Also, the fabulous nihilla (Bonnie) is interviewed in it.

2. Would you pay $12 for a pocket-sized book of my poems? I’m trying to get a sense of how many I should get printed. It would be a 78-page book, but little in physical size. If I print 50, they cost me about $12.70ea. If I print 100, they’re cheaper ($10.30) but I’d be outlaying $1,030 up front and I’d need to sell 86 of them @ $12 a pop to get my money back.

Hmmm. I sense a poll coming on.

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Jun 24 2006

Good stuff

1. {ariel flux} is back online after many hours of craziness and a steep learning curve. It’s still running the old software, but I will fiddle around with a test upgrade on a test site now rather than trying it with the live site. Best to learn before you start making money, right?

2. Having a lot of fun setting up the new Magazine Empire, including choosing hardware and back-up systems and working out networks. I’ve always wanted a wireless Mac office filled with funkiness and beanbags around a coffee table for meetings in an awesome warehouse and now I get to do it!

3. Thanks to the visit to Apple yesterday, I finally bought the proper connector for my laptop to talk to my TV, so I can now play DVDs from it. Since I can already connect the speakers from my stereo to it, I’m now sorted and the fact that my old Kenwood DVD player has been stuffing up will no longer be an issue.

4. Have just been loaned Noam Chomsky’s Failed States by a friend. Am looking forward to diving into another serious political book. The oral histories of the Egyptian women I’ve been reading are fascinating but not intellectually strenuous.

Now, to play around with poetry stuff for my gig coming up on July 18 — put it in your diaries. More details soon.

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Jun 11 2006

A poem is a city

Have just seen Factotum at the Nova with Matt, so I thought I’d post this Bukowski poem that’s in it, while I get my head together to write the review for {ariel flux}.

A Poem is a City by Charles Bukowski

a poem is a city filled with streets and sewers
filled with saints, heroes, beggars, madmen,
filled with banality and booze,
filled with rain and thunder and periods of
drought, a poem is a city at war,
a poem is a city asking a clock why,
a poem is a city burning,
a poem is a city under guns
its barbershops filled with cynical drunks,
a poem is a city where God rides naked
through the streets like Lady Godiva,
where dogs bark at night, and chase away
the flag; a poem is a city of poets,
most of them quite similar
and envious and bitter…
a poem is this city now,
50 miles from nowhere,
9:09 in the morning,
the taste of liquor and cigarettes,
no police, no lovers, walking the streets,
this poem, this city, closing its doors,
barricaded, almost empty,
mournful without tears, aging without pity,
the hardrock mountains,
the ocean like a lavender flame,
a moon destitute of greatness,
a small music from broken windows…

a poem is a city, a poem is a nation,
a poem is the world…

and now I stick this under glass
for the mad editor’s scrutiny,
and night is elsewhere
and faint gray ladies stand in line,
dog follows dog to estuary,
the trumpets bring on gallows
as small men rant at things
they cannot do.

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Jun 5 2006

Protected: Draft poem

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May 25 2006

Poetry update

All righty then. Many late nights in front of the telly later and I have migrated 61 of my poems into the new system, slightly tweaked with feedback from various folks and moved to my own server since I couldn’t fiddle with colours and CSS if it stayed on WordPress.

It’s at the same address as my old poetry (http://www.heliotrope.net.au/mordwen/poetry/). If you had a particular favourite poem that has not been migrated yet, you can find it in the old poems’ home until I get around to moving the rest of them.

I’ve also gone to the liberty of creating mordwen_poetry as a feed for those of you who wish to read any new poetry I put on there through LJ. People using real RSS readers can just go straight to the actual RSS feed.

Gah.

Um, also, diary note: I will be featuring at the Spinning Room South, ET’s, High St, Prahran, on July 18, from about 8.30pm. For those Melburnians who wish to rock up and listen to me read, I’d love to see you there. And hey, if you’re someone who’s been reading but never met me, it’s your chance to come and say hi!

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May 3 2006

Poetry and the young today

I meandered down to my first poetry gig for a long while tonight, mainly because good old Tim Hamilton (drzero) was featuring at the Spinning Room. He was as amazing as he ever was, and possibly even more so, with the new pieces about Paris and some of the Minor Arcana series that I’d heard less frequently being stronger than the old favourites.

At the same time I heard some amazing new voices, not least of which were Neil McCarthy, a stunning Irishman with a powerful way with words who’s featuring there next week and Josephine Rowe, a 21-year-old powerhouse of a bright thing who already knows her work off by heart, speaks with a semi-American accent although she’s only ever lived here and whose web site is filled with flash and fabulousness.

I read one version of the Minstrels and Mischief cycle and the poem I wrote for Tim and Jonathan and was very flattered to be called back and then read the pantoum I wrote for Grandma, which isn’t actually online yet, but is very appropriate since I’m heading to Sydney this weekend for her 90th birthday bash. Enjoyed hearing Cam read again (and thanks for the wine) and meeting Antoine, yet another guy from Lyons living in Australia (apparently it’s a minor invasion).

I find Josephine intriguing, in a sense my first encounter with this new generation as adult. What I mean is that Kyle and Alix, Jacinta’s kids, both have slightly American accents, partly due to television and partly due to Mum’s accent, and Tal, Georgia’s step-son has a semi-American accent, acknowledged as mostly due to television, and here is this 21-year-old saying, yes, I think my accent is just from television. And her clear facility with the web site, in the way that my ease with desktop publishing must have frustrated and amazed those 15 years older than me and still doing paste-up back in 1991…

So, this is what intimations of age are…

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Aug 8 2005

Experiment

I have a little project under construction… a hypertext poem. I think it may be ready for a public outing…

Presenting a tale of chance and magic, love, a mask-maker, a star-gazer and a fire-dancer…

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Jul 25 2005

Playing around…

Going through some old poetry, found this. Can’t remember if I’ve posted it before…

As a child I collected swatches of colour
Citrine and smoke, jasper and brick,
Built secret lives in patterns, rehearsed
Intimate disclosures, carefully structured
Interactions. Now the untold moments
Of that life are shimmered slicks of memory.
I imagine myself in my room, sorting
Squares of cobalt, cinnabar, alizarin, emerald.
Precious knowledges and hidden mastery,
Never confessed. Did I sneak these past
Checkpoints, hoard collections of space,
Gather these threads to me like life?
Was it an indulgence, wondered at, our
Strange daughter, with the books and the
Charts, laying out strategies and making
Games from hues of chance?

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Jul 10 2005

chaos/control

these pared down, harrowed days
conjured from flame and fervour
spread thin like a cry
drawn from parched lips;
like an ache refracted.

in our cities, bodies drift like sparks
in conflagrations — ash-light;
empty rhetoric falls gnarled as tinder.

what foul seraphs advance in your name,
slouch into excess and devastation?
what futile gestures must be performed
to abase ourselves before this fear,
before this terrible undying stench abates?

justice is a jibbed fool
twisting in the wind like hope deflected.

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Jun 23 2005

Protected: Melbourne Uni, June 2005

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