Tuesday, 13 December 2016

Tasmanian Europa Poets Gazette No 153, January 2017

Phil Harper


Who Would Go To Aleppo?

First inhabited in 5000 BC
Important city before Damascus
Taken over by Alexander The Great.
Stabilised by the Romans.
Conquered by Muslims who replaced churches
               with mosques.
Besieged but not conquered by Crusaders.
Overpowered by Mongols and Turks in 1400 -
               a tower with 20,000 skulls built.
In 1516, a trading centre, part of the Ottoman Empire
               and the Silk Road.
Critically referred to by Shakespeare in Macbeth
               and Othello.
Part of newly-established nation, Syria, after
               the First World War.
Annexed by Turkey after War of Independence.
French declare state of Aleppo in 1920.
Union with Iraq, 1948.
Union with Egypt, 1956.
Syrian Civil War outbreak, 2011.
Car bombed by whoever wants to.
Air bombed by Russia and their associates.
Air bombed by USA and their associates.
7000 years of indiscriminate fighting and rivalry.
Who would take a holiday or a one-way trip to Aleppo?
And we wonder why does the world have refugees?

© Phil Harper


Cathy Weaver




A Message To A Bully

Why do you tease and hurt me,
emotionally and physically?
Would you, the bully, like to be
treated that way?
Would you like to be called nasty names?
Would you like to see nasty messages
about you posted on the internet?
Would you like to live in fear
of getting beaten up on the way
to or from school?
               I have feelings.
               I have rights.
A right to feel safe
and to live my life without fear
or emotional torment.
Just because I’m different
doesn’t give you the right
to make my life a misery.
So please leave me alone
and let me be.

© Cathy Weaver





Photo montage, Skaters, Joe Lake




You Stood There

You stood there, in front of us, at the lectern.
Dressed in your Gucci suit.
You smelt of French scent.
You spoke academic English as you
Gesticulated your ideas about how
To save the starving Third World children.
               I feel my stomach churn;
I want to scream out at you:
What would a person like you
                              know about poverty and deprivation?
Have you ever been a single parent
And not been able to give your children
McDonald’s or take them to the movies?
Because you and your ilk would only eat
                              luxury food
And your children would go to a private school.
              
During the interval of your lecture,
I sat alone, out of boredom.
I reluctantly picked up a book from a coffee table.
On its cover, I see blue-eyed Caucasian
                              emaciated children
And superimposed over these images
                              is your photograph
And I read that you were
Born in the Ukraine during the Stalin era,
That your parents were taken to Siberia
                              - never to be seen again
And that your eight siblings died from starvation.
Further, that you witnessed cannibalism there.
You came to Australia as a refugee.

After the interval, when your lecture continued,
I listened in awe.
I had judged a person by their clothes.

© Judy Brumby-Lake 2005




Collage Figure Skaters, Joe Lake


Patterns

Patterns - where do they begin -
And where do they end?
Are they meant to please, tease, amuse,
               or puzzle us?
Only the creator, the artist and God
Would ever know.
The artist dabs and sweeps his brush
               this way and that,
Creating a mood - the swirl of colours
Patterning his work to please himself and us.
The writer strings words together -
Single pearls to create a verbal necklace
And patterns and plots evolve -
Subterfuge to tease us -
Who will live and who will die?
And will there be a happy ending?
Intricate patterns in marble, in stone,
In mosaic glass and tile, in wood,
In precious gems, lace and wool,
In earth, sea, sand and sky -
Intricate patterns in life itself -
Threads of experience and emotion woven
               and intertwined
In complicated and exquisite colour -
Sadly though a beautiful beginning often belies
A faded, rough end!

© June Maureen Hitchcock






No One Knows What Tomorrow Holds

She came from overseas to Melbourne,
There she met her future husband
I knew the family very well.
After 22 years of marriage, he died.
Every Wednesday and Sunday I visited them,
My family adored them.
So sad, so very sad.
This dear friend of mine has Alzheimer’s
And husband dies while wife so very ill.
Moral: Treat everyone with respect
               while they are alive.
Perform kind deeds
For no one knows what tomorrow holds.

© Yvonne Matheson

So the new year is with us. Hooray for 2017! Now we can move on, make a fresh start. Forget about 2016 and pretend it never happened!

It’s all too easy to gloss over the year past, the good and the bad. Live for the now! Don’t ever look back. Don’t pause for a moment and think what might have been, what could have been. No, none of that. Just keep going along, safe in the confines of our little-unit lives.

This writer can’t do that. Not stuck in the past, not mourning over lost fragments of time, not crying “Woe is me!”

Remembering instead this woman’s long struggle against all the odds, who made her mark on 2016 and will never ever be forgotten. The woman who could smile through ongoing pain, who survived more than most of us could have endured and who held the next day precious, if despondent, on what could not be driven away with scudding clouds.

Death waited at her shoulder. She may have known this but others around her did not. This writer looked to every passing second with hope, blind to the prospect of there being an end. This writer implored “Don’t die” and this woman replied “I’ll try not to.”

Last roll of the dice on that Sunday, when the black crows flew close by the house in two circling movements. The Sign! The portent of something being very wrong, very final.

This woman had died - and died alone, utterly alone! No comfort of an encircling arm, no cooling against a warm body. Just the last gasping breath and then chill until that chill became very cold. All was so still.

Oblivion - or maybe something better. This woman believed.

I cry for what could have been, what might have been, but most of all, I cry for myself and what I have lost.

I won’t forget 2016 and all the many years before.     I won’t forget Barbara.








Cruel And Gentle

I heard the cry above
the scream of death,
It echoed and lingered
on summer’s breeze,
Cruel and gentle,
Inviting the sun
to puncture clear blue
in a frenzy of black,
A cry of pure agony
that begged another gasp,
Death eager and loud,
Consuming every mundane hope,
Nothing to hear
but the fury of oblivion,
Dark time descends, vengeful,
upon ghost days
that beg forgiveness
for the breath of a second,
In the maelstrom
that definitively challenges
one shard of fragile morning,
Dark time calling
from the sun’s grave
where every light
is captive in eternity.
The rage of starlings
silent now in perpetuity.
Eyes are not delighted
in the blindness.
I heard the cry
through parchment lips,
And the din of dying
sucked blue to black.
Black took it all.
I could swear I heard
a cry above the scream of death.

© Michael Garrad


Reality

From out my window, through the sea of air,
I see the shadows on the grass below.
The roses paint their red with compliment to the green.
The grass was cut and packed into plastic wheels.
The breeze strokes gently at the eucalypts
As bottle brushes wait for birds to feed.
I hear the television in the other room
As Judy gives a rare and instant laugh
On something someone must have said
From out the screen.
The laptop that creates the symbols I type,
Hums gently with its fan to cool the CPU.
Judy is about to feed the whining dog
Who has been fed by me.
Summer has arrived,
I don’t need the woollen jacket anymore.
Outside my window the lime and the orange trees
Have flowers to invite the bees
And then, next winter, I will peel and eat.
The camera sits patiently next to me,
Containing images and views suspended
As in memory but accessible.
My left hand has a slight attack of future pain
As in old age disease sneaks in unseen
But I have lived and I have, overall, lived well.

© Joe Lake

Bill’s Life Of Adventure
A short-short story by Joe Lake

Bill’s mind had been drifting even as they took their nightly walk against the homeward-moving traffic. His wife, Gerda, walked a few steps behind him and his ‘walker’ as he shuffled along the footpath. Gerda had been distracted by a red rose in one of the gardens and had stopped to smell it. Bill had continued his hobble. An old dog, a terrier, Sniff, who normally hung around the old-people’s home, trotted just in front of Bill. On the other side of the busy road, Bill noticed Martha, a lady whose terrier was pulling on its leash, barking angrily at Sniff, who had stopped with his ears up and tail rigid.
               Then, for whatever reason, the dog’s rheumatic limbs rushed him recklessly into the traffic to get at the terrier. Bill’s reaction was automatic; he staggered after Sniff into the middle of the road. Gerda looked up from her rose and saw what was going on. With eyes focused on Bill, she didn’t see the car heading towards her that screeched to a halt but alas, the SUV had hit Gerda and smashed her head into the bitumen. Bill stood dazed, staring at Gerda’s form until the ambulance came then someone took him back to the home.
               Months passed. In his Alzheimer’s-foggy mind, he had survived the funeral and was made to exercise. Supported by his ‘walker’, he hobbled around the yard of the home until someone left the gate open and Bill proceeded onto the busy road. He was nearly killed and his ‘walker’ was destroyed. The management of the home decided that he was not, ever, to leave and had to exercise in the secure part of the home.
               He escaped another couple of times, each time the cars were able to brake and Bill survived.
               Nothing happened for a few months, then Bill got out with just his walking stick. He was determined, in his Alzheimer’s mind, to find Gerda. The traffic was heavy as he stepped into it, then someone grabbed him by the scruff of the neck. ‘No Bill, you must remain on the footpath. Listen to your guardian angel.’



Joe Lake
Judy Brumby-Lake (Joe Lake's wife)
June Maureen Hitchcock
Michael Garrad