Sunday, September 30, 2012



Park love

like lovers do
once we parked in
wired valleys
shook leaves from lemon gums
hid in Cimmerian myth
stirred the river oil
while the motor cooled

obsessed with love
we warmed to faded sunsets
opened our ripe bodies
to the silky underworld
while the radio hummed

furtive we climbed
over bulging Holden seats
toyed with our bareness
tangled love in knots
while the wind wooed

we claimed the back seat
a hard travesty
of lost space, feet
and perspiration
while we pressed

at midnight
flashing lights caught
us laughing
to cover our young bodies
blowing smoke rings
while we cooled




Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Leading Australian journalist and author, Dr Anne Summers AO, delivered her lecture titled "Her Rights At Work? The Political Persecution of Australia's First Female Prime Minister" at the 2012 Human Rights and Social Justice Lecture at the University of Newcastle on Friday 31 August.

Read more about Dr Summer's lecture at the University:
http://www.newcastle.edu.au/news/2012/08/30/lecture-to-shine-light-on-politic...

Watch her lecture @ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RY7FFt-ciE4


First Failed Boyfriend

Fearless, he drove his Austin to Patonga.
Steep mountains, rock-slides, washaways and slush.
He travelled through these treacherous hills
on winter mornings, on his way to work.
Ambitious, he worked in Woolworths.
I fell in love with his movie-blue eyes
above the beets and sprouts.
He had a cute radio-voice when he announced the specials.
I got to know him, his face cocked in terror
when I asked him out.
‘Elliot Ness eyes,’ my mother said.
We did the courting thing, car ride to Patonga
every Sunday morning, hand-brake cuddle,
his hands going down, where I thought he’d be exciting –
Instead, he raised static on the radio’s lit face.
After six months, his heartbeat flapped
over a new girl in town.
Lined up at the Regal pictures,
dressed in white socks, sports shirt.
She pranced and spun like Elizabeth Taylor.
I tuned-in to Sunday night TV, The Untouchables –
Robert Stack. I fell in love with his undress-me eyes
over Coca-Cola and a bag of chips.






Harvest Festival Dress

A church table assigned to spring.
The greatest number of sunflowers, almonds,
beans, you’ve ever seen;
packed in sheaths of wheat, rice,
barley stalks, ascending the altar.
The display is larger this year,
a gathering of strawberries, peas, artichokes, 
a month's work of citrus sweetened in jars.
Impossible to align with comedians, but they are here;
three vases of pink gladioli, some in white
arranged in wisps of maidenhair.
Harvest festival is a day of memory, a choir of children
returning. One girl in apricot, delineated,
arches her heels in black-patent.
All eyes are on her.
She is a flower in a field, hand painted in
bellflower, pink sweet pea.
Her dress demands a signal, a swirl –
stimulating communion with her feet.
Rarely is she chased, except today, flushed
out of hiding from behind the church.
The adrenalin is high in her overreach for glass,
creaming soda dropped to her knees like prayer.
A ruby moonbeam staining her skirt.
Sunlight won't bring it out. 
Mother & Gran each having a turn.
Her eyes burning in their own private fire.
'There's only one way,' the women report,
'two pockets on each side of the skirt
sewn in bellflower, white sweet pea.’
Concealment or words to that effect
before a terrifying end
to a beautiful dress.

Saturday, September 22, 2012


Becoming woman
 
i
 
I write myself on the page
not as the universal I, but 'woman'
padding the tide's morning surf.
a camera lucida of memory catches Broken Bay
in the earnest scurry of soldier crabs, the whoop of rod line
and sinker, rows of paddleboats, dinghies upturned
metres from a young girl/becoming woman.
on the bow of a boat, she ripples film into surface water
tilts the cabin's channel observance
before diving in
 
ii
 
she is woman now, remembering the real
that-has-been before the lens, first crack in the sepia edges
of an Ettalong shore, pylon cling of a Wagstaff ferry
its fluxive rub, seagulls shouldering flag-line
their white calligraphy of tarp.
silent beach empty as a lonely dune
waits for the first child out of school
waits for the ringed plunge of blood worms
summer's shifting canoe.
only the bay gives out a different call
when the seaweed's parted and a fisherman casts
an angry fist, buries the globe of his belly in water
 
 iii
 
 while ratcheting his dinghy
 there is no need for the ebb and flow of his outrage
 when there are machinations of a better catch, bay offering
 the martini of her sex, olive flesh, oblique lip, the aftermath
 of radio silence, channel marker showing signs
 of deeper water to come, inlet anchoring ideas
 into a dark grid of trees, barnacled shore
 
 iv
 
 there on that sea the boat's voice erupts
 churning silt into the engine's memory
 scuttling the gelatin-still surface, silver glide of whitebait.
 on the sandbar's thin back there is no one, no rock.
 only the sound of halyards clinking mainsail and jib, the scum
 of mutineers darkening the page, Phantom busy clapping heads
 off the coast of Martinique.
 she can't wait for the scrub slide, prickly foothills, his breath
 stinging her with last night's rum. she is Daisy lifting feathers
 from a comic book frame, spur-winging waves, the way
 waterfowl do, sending out an adrenalin of colour, though
 her aim is to run
 
 v
 
 she has become nineteen
 contemplating the way it was, ghosts under the bed
 voyeurs skirting her legs, flasher at Central. Liverpool beanie
 on a train journey, coercing his fingers under newsprint, 
 thinks he can tunnel the black hole of her knees.
 Phantom's Diana symbolically vanishes from the platform,
 as the day lingers in the hem of torchlight, in the descent of
 theatre stairs. the hushed expectancy: tunic in storms of sweetness,   
 candy pulp in miserable alleys, pace of streets under raucous shoes,
 the Saturday gaze of grimy men. the one from the bay still
 crunching his boots and black singlet into the words of her poem, over
 and over, his loose tongue ripping into the motor of memory
 the lost harbour of her youth
 
 vi
 
 a faint scent of the bay returns
 like entrails and fish-heads in the stern of a boat.
 this time, his image is the one the older woman
 releases into water
 catching the sunlight
 before it sinks and drowns.
 
 

Thursday, September 20, 2012


Dog at the Crossroads

 


          All knowledge, the totality of all questions and all answers is
          contained in the dog.  Franz Kafka 

 A kelpie-cross waits at crossroads, morning

to dusk. At dusk wet from the mist, and in the

morning the breeze chilling her back.

Snout to damp grass, she hears an oak tree quivering

the volume of it, a distant grating on stones.

Ears in the dignity of listening.

Her back twitches with a horsefly touch, sending

a shudder to the base of her tail.

Two horses in a nearby paddock are nothing.

Three geese on the lake are nothing. 


Chickens at the back door are nothing.

Only people matter.

Someone passes her pooled eyes,

caught in that outward stare.

Prescience shows on her face

as if she is one of Pavlov’s dogs.

Two gates are pulled backward like oars.

One hand waves her on, two hands

click the latch, behind.

Her tail tracks like a metronome,

her legs swoop into the long grass,

her body braids a pathway, loosening vines.

There are things that you do not know.

The privacy of her.

The way she travels into shadows,  or milkweed,


those second thoughts before a walk or run.

Is that her silence echoing back from a measured stealth?

When the sun sinks into the blue tops of trees

and mist rings the valley, she turns halfway to laid scents,

runs back to the crossroads, the curve of lake

with the lights on it, to the paddocks of horses,

the same patch, and her body in it.








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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