These Flying Islands Blog

Acrocorinth

Hello Flying Islanders!

I’m very excited to have been warmly welcomed into this community and blogosphere as an honorary member after launching Steve Armstrong’s latest pocket book of poetry What’s Left.

I’m a poet, and emerging literary critic, living on Darkinjung country on the Central Coast of NSW. My chapbook, A Fistful of Hail, was published by Vagabond Press in 2018.

Here’s a poem from that collection, which inspired the title:


Acrocorinth

You shall eat the fruit of the labor of your hands; you shall be blessed…

Psalm 128:2

Time has scalloped and tightly crimped

the hill’s stone — all the troughs

and rifts of its flanks studded

with cypress, laurels. The Acrocorinth

juts into wind above the yellowed vineyards

and timber pig-sheds, the fish

like wands of garnet or black-spotted quartz

carving the shallows at Vrahati beach.

My grandfather’s people

coaxed

clusters of bitter-and-sweet jade fruit

from the vines, while time – like a god’s

hand on the hill – tapped off seams

of limestone with the rain’s pick, or pounded out

trenches with fistfuls of hail, lightning.

In the village, pines drip

resin in the brush. I walk

dirt tracks where hens pace for seed. In dusty

gardens, in olive groves, the goats swank

oily beards, the hammered scrolls

of horns, gnashing thyme thickets — the Acrocorinth

pale as whey to the south. From here

I make out the old acropolis extruding

from the hill like blunted teeth; I probe,

till my eyes ache, for Aphrodite’s

temple, nesting somewhere in the high

ridges. The Corinthian Gulf flickers

down a north-east road, and I know

this evening the sun will strut there like a peacock

trailing long feathers across

the water. Soon, I’ll walk back

to my great uncle’s house.

He’ll empty wine from a barrel.

He’ll tell me stories of his brother’s fist.

I’ve seen the x-rays — my mother’s

dented wrist, forearm — all the fractured

bones. And I’ll think of those hands,

coaxing, on the vines; and I’ll think of a god

with a fistful of hail. I’ll drink

the cool, bitter pink liquid, and currents

of sweetness will twist

through each mouthful.

Acknowledgments

‘Acrocorinth’ was first published in Philament Journal — Precarity, Vol. 22 December 2016; and appeared in The Best Australian Poems 2017.

Acrocorinth Read More »

a door in the day – for Lou Smith

 

a door in the day

for Lou Smith

 

none thought to lock

 

bring the bones

come flesh

 

do come in

you’re welcome

 

say I, the inhabited fancy

 

step through the city

take this pill, melt  

 

a fall of sunlight here

just where the day grows over

 

come seasons, turn

roller skates

 

prepare me a piano please

or any strings at all

                                                                            

not to show you

just to say

the only way

to make the door

is to open it

and step in 

a door in the day – for Lou Smith Read More »

Beyond (in response to Papa Osmubal’s mixed media work ‘Doors to Both Worlds’) – Lou Smith

 

Will you still write to me, when you are gone?
Which door shall I open to find you?
a skeleton key    mellifluous song
not milled from nickel and silver     
will your breath still cloud in the cold, cold air,
for a moment as if we are gods?
s
  w
    o
      o
        p 
            low from silhouette of buildings
            
to beyond

Beyond (in response to Papa Osmubal’s mixed media work ‘Doors to Both Worlds’) – Lou Smith Read More »

Spruce

 

Check the neatness

of the homeless

under Glebe rail bridge –

to each their own arch

open plan, plein air

here a brushed tent

a swag-bed rolled

camp bed made

cardboard pantry

wardrobe trolley.

Minimilists

before their time.

A ragman’s bike

a spirit cooker …

what’s to declutter?

what forsake?

 

Arty bastards.

 

         yes

        even

     the gravel

looks Zen raked.

 

You’re tidy shamed

by a pair of shoes

in the spick & span sun

a’bask in the arch

so sweetly arrayed.

The dirty mercy

of house proud poverty

don’t need no maid.

 

 

 

Spruce Read More »