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MFreeZone: Ian Irvine

 

Four Poems From 'Facing the Demon of Noontide'

Copyright , 1998, Ian Irvine all rights reserved.

New Age Quacks:

Old man into reincarnation

who’ll swallow that with the best of intentions

he said, ‘See man, see if a past life interferes,’

well I don’t need no more misery

got quite enough just follows me

this time around ...

So take what I give you

‘Thirty dollars sounds great.’

and with the best of intentions

and a whole whole heap of civilised inventions

You can stuff it where it fits!

Well man it’s the new Fundamentals

seen rattling their kettles,

Liberals in shackles

Hari’s with rattles

just stop and choose one

supermarket sale on

mind-float drugs to maintain

every put on.

‘Who man, needs divine intervention?’

‘Nirvana extension?’

‘Religious injection?’ moribund

clap trap, horse fat,

loony bin, sex is sin,

Astrology is in,

a mystical some- thing

Not Me.

So take what I give you

‘Thirty dollars sounds great’

and with whole, whole heap of civilised inventions

you can stuff it where it fits!

‘X’: Administered to Death.

‘At the beginning of the modern period, all the prerogatives of the continental states accumulated in the hands of those princes who most relentlessly took the course of administrative bureaucratisation. It is obvious that technically the great modern state is absolutely dependent upon a bureaucratic basis.’ [Max Weber.]

The year is turning circles

and man has more papers

to imprison him,

to provoke judgement and

assess worth.

If you get ‘x’ number of

bearded permissions

you can exchange them for a passport

to get medical advice

and thus earn more units of ‘x’

which means you get a

tax file

and one day a call up to fight in

and wars against communist dictators

who came to power because of

world bank meddling

There will be ‘x’ numbers of casualties

you have an ‘x’ percent chance

of being one of them.

Even so the right to earn,

ensures you will consume ‘x’

units of compulsory fall apart commodities

planned in accordance with

gold-millennium Progress

Sales are tipped to rise at

‘x’ percent per year.

and apple trees only last seven years

after ‘x’ numbers of scientists

have messed about with them

and they die after five years!

kak-it, there are,

‘X’ numbers of research workers

trying to find out why.

(1988)

They wanna jab her full of drugs:

In using the term ‘petrification,’ one can exploit a number of the meanings embedded in this word:

1. A particular form of terror, whereby one is petrified, i.e. turned to stone.

2. The dread of this happening: the dread, that is, of the possibility of turning, or being turned, from a live person into a dead thing, into a stone, into a robot, an automaton, without personal autonomy of action, an it without subjectivity.

(R.D. Laing, The Divided Self.)

They call her crazy and jab her full of drugs,

‘coz of the suicide attempt with 22 tranquillisers

in a sweltering caravan

picture: pinks and violet-greys

and vomit on the sheets

Mother and child.

They wanna put her in a psychiatric ward, ‘Group,’

And eternity sleep, ‘Just like her sister.’

but only sixteen and strewn helter-po

among the pots and pans

with bloated limbs

and angular fears

She’s only sixteen and she’d love to die

got slash marks, whitely on her wrists

after schooldays and the last

sugar-book rejection, hero-

triggered despair, dark hold,

we all know

hate her

for showing it so.

She has folded shoulders, frail chest,

face ivory-white, terror’s paint,

Remembers tiled corridors -

mostly reds and filtered whites -

buzz-bombs of the brain

and moth’s wings across the T.V. sets

of infancy ...

Look at this place

This place in which she lives

this cramped hovel -

This place where

spectres hang like posters

at the foot of her bed.

And she’s sitting here with us

and when she talks about men,

leaving

her,

like her daddy did when she was three

about three years before her mother tried to kill

her sister with a knife, about ten years before

her mother saw trains full of maggots

and put a freshly cut pigs leg - wet with salty blood -

under the blankets of her daughter’s bed

about thirteen years after her dad,

whom she can’t remember, started beating her,

grey morning sun, blood-stained moon,

after, or during, the torment of her birth

In Caesars hands ...

They wanna jab her full of drugs

make her attend group, then, maybe, give her

SHOCK TREATMENT

at age twenty three.

They wanna jab her full of drugs.

Womb Decay:

Most adults cannot comprehend the agony that a newborn is in, even though he may be crying and screaming his heart out. But because he cannot speak, we act as though he hasn’t ‘said’ anything. Because he cannot explain himself we discount his pain as harmless. We expect newborns to writhe and scream ... [Arthur Janov, Imprints: The Lifelong Effects of the Birth Experience.]

I can hold clockwise onto you,

lie still in your calamities,

your cool curtained flesh.

And I can lie earthbound,

your vocals from the highest

concrete floor,

Holding fast with shattered glass,

screaming, ‘Don’t fall!’

into the dizzy lightening

night.

But I have fallen,

flown, already,

mother ...

and fleshless,

but for the sweet anticipation

of concrete and glass and

a scream-razor cry

carving up the body of our lies.


Ian Irvine, is an Australian who has lived in NZ, the US, and the UK. He has a great deal of poetry and short stories and essays published about the place, most recently by the Canadian Journal 'The Antigonish review', Lotus magazine. The Age (newspaper, Melbourne) and Parabola. My reviews and poetry appear regularly at Australia's major literary literaray net site 'Ozlit. He is also editor of 'The Animist' http://www.diskotech.com.au/asphodel which is, we like to think, one of Australia's leading literary e-journals.The Animist is archived by the Australian National Library as a journal of national cultural significance.

Contact Information

Ian Irvine
e-mail:
asphodel@iaccess.com.au
www: http://www.diskotech.com.au/asphodel
Tel 13-54-393-662

Post Office Box 309
Strathfieldsaye
Victoria 3551
Australia

E&OE

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