Sunday, January 22, 2012


Lines composed while thinking about the Powerhouse Museum
                                                                    after Billy Collins

How agreeable it is sitting here in Perth
not thinking about St. Mary’s Cathedral,
the Domain or Hyde Park’s flowering morning.
No need to stand in queues for the Museum or

the Opera House with its sarcophagus of lights,
or count the pigeons lunching at El Alamein,
the wrinkled outlines of its spray like saints in glass.
No need to get lost in the streets of Glebe, memorizing

a succession of streets to the Friend in Hand,
or view Picasso’s masterpieces in gallery frames.
How much better it is to be at home in thirty eight
degrees, with the air-conditioner on, books on the lap.

And after the heatwave, a trip to the supermarket
to buy a journal, some pens, to record just how
a monumental sun drags itself down like a dungeon
ball, sets at dusk, a tired rucksack into the night.

             *   *   *

A Spyglass on Sydney

I would have liked to get to know
the city better than three years.

I have so many memories I don’t know
what to do with them. On second thoughts

I’ll move my table closer to the harbour.
My binoculars spin on my neck to get

a better view. Further from the bridge
there’s a bottle of wine on the ferry,

group activities, everyone my age.
I’m reminded of the workplace, shoes

paired in chronological order, wedges
from George Street, platforms from Kings

Cross. There is attention in stiletto heels.
I shoulder my way into Wynyard, for more

shoes. I can learn to dance, in circumspect.
Only at the movies do I face a new problem,

not the sailor, or that Damien never phones.
I’ve left the iron on, and no-one’s at home.

             *   *   *

Home for the Holidays

Home for the holidays and I’m three stanzas
between country air and deep compression.

Up there the clouds are snowfields, icecaps of
Antarctica. From my window, I feel the force
into Mascot. I have a stubborn prune in my throat.

I’ve been away studying Flaubert and Mallarme.
Parents think I’m Judith Enright, but it’s Marco Polo
I am, back and forth, back and forth, amongst

a constellations of random stars. Sydney, the green
blotter of my youth, pimples and Tafe certificates.
Prince Alfred Park where I almost died, tripped

by four iced legs. Sydney, ah! The harbour at dawn,
spinnakers at sunset, seabirds on the Opera House.
The rock stars & concerts I sometimes lost track of.

Let’s leave the house, catch a ferry to the zoo. Hear the
same peacock cry, giving out his woodwind sound.

             *    *    *

Thursday, January 19, 2012

The Laneway

You look back as if into a rear-view image
of Ireland. Seams of light and dark overlap hedge,

stone and field where cows snub noses into turf
Tall grasses yield the return of spring. The wind
sounds like a flute playing, and intermittent farm
houses in unkempt orchards are barely seen.
On a two lane highway, you pit-stop
for a moment,
hands firmly clenched on lunch, sweets, drinks.
Coke and juice move quickly through your esophageus,

at least that's the way the body tells it.  Now, the
bladder cramps as one forty kilometres slowly pass
from Westport to An Longfort. No service station in sight, 
no verge on this one way street, until a laneway! 
Time to depress all that liquid into knotweed, the
mind giving you this one clear thought between
pleasure and relief. You're like
a dog wanting to put 
down its scent until a grey car arrives, blocks you in;
farmer or landowner jerking your lead. Shades of dark 
sun glasses walk towards the car. It's not the owner
it's "The Garde!" You're the Australian abroad, caught
well before bare tail reaches Irish soil. Crikey!
Two men approach, clean cut, one stares into the open
window tells you farms are being robbed. You're acting
suspicious. You confess, tall grasses are a great
cover for a tinkle. Wry smiles are withheld under
peaked caps, they hardly stop to blink, back away 
in their unmarked car. You walk into the lane's interior, 
squat long enough to count five cows swishing tails
like batons, black eye patches staring you down.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Bounty

Bounty
Prose Poetry

The Five Lives of Ms Bennett

The Five Lives of Ms Bennett
A Family Saga

The Ozone Cafe

The Ozone Cafe
White Collar Crime

The Last Asbestos Town

The Last Asbestos Town
Available from Amazon

Evangelyne

Evangelyne
Published by Australian Poetry Centre, Melbourne

of Arc & Shadow

of Arc & Shadow
Published by Sunline Press, WA

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MBA (Wrtg) ECowan

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Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Helen Hagemann holds an MA in Writing from Edith Cowan University, has three poetry books: Evangelyne & Other Poems published by Australian Poetry, Melbourne (2009) and of Arc & Shadow published by Sunline Press, Perth (2013). Bounty: prose poetry is published by Oz.one Publishing in 2024. She has three novels published The Last Asbestos Town (2020), The Ozone Café (2021) and The Five Lives of Ms Bennett a result of her Masters degree at ECU (2006), is published by Oz.one Publishing (2023).

Helen Hagemann MBA (Wrtg): ECowan

Helen Hagemann MBA (Wrtg): ECowan
Author & Poet

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