SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry
in English.
Issue Five
PETER BOYLE News from the frontier To wake at this precise moment – five presences in the room, the forest around me a sun and a moon wearing different faces tacked up on the walls of vast citadels of crowded bickering houses the light of an empty dawn passing through all of them beyond, wilder creatures lunging for the gold casket buried inside my chest in the small stillness that travels with me I listen to a voice I can almost make out the sad rain that falls at the heart of the world Nunc dimitis It is a prayer almost. The hands lift into air tied to little famine-balloons while the eyes drift off to other landscapes of trees and stones and creatures climbing out of wells – all hale and whole in the uneven sunlight of the world. A river descends from pool to pool ferrying the garlands, headless dolls, plastic bags of snapshots from our childhood, the wide gawky black and white grin. We are at a port where the long jetty goes out so far we start to lose the memory of land. You will need to celebrate this – he said. If I look one way the sea has already closed over me. If I look the other way I am joined hand in hand with the crowd of my dead, welcomed home, at one with their weeping. It is the festival of letting go. A thousand flowers stood up in a field and the sun methodically broke their necks. On a calm winter night I am walking towards The car is buried in the stars We come from the hospital We go to the crematorium We move house and move house again Our backs tell us how deep the trough is we must excavate The trees grow over us On infinite cloudless days we are taken to see our ancestors Evenings when we have nothing they are waiting for us on the rambling wooden jetty where the hills have come down to inspect the sea Their clothes glitter, their eyes are firm Across a frozen dawn an acidic mist rises We start in earnest Plans are made – buildings begun and abandoned The leaves and the ants interrupt their wars We reach for the pure insight the pebbles are whispering Fish know us as intimately as sunlight Neophytes of a newt we have entered and passed through the water Our hands are filled with loss and jagged explosions of strangeness The car is buried in the stars Peter Boyle was born in Melbourne, Australia, and grew up in Sydney. He started writing poetry in his teens. He earned an honours degree in English from Sydney University, a Diploma of Education, and an MA in Spanish and Latin American Studies. He is the author of seven books of poetry, most recently Ghostspeaking (2016), Towns in the Great Desert (2013) and Apocrypha (2009). In 2017 Ghostspeaking was awarded the New South Wales Premier's Prize for Poetry. As a translator of poetry from French and Spanish he has had six books published, including Selected Poems by Olga Orozco, Marosa di Giorgio and Jorge Palma, Tokonoma and Anima by José Kozer, and The Trees by Eugenio Montejo. His translation of José Kozer's Índole was published early this year by University of Alabama Press. |
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