“Blats
booted to blatant
dubbing
the avenue dire
with
rubbings of Sveinn Forkbeard
leading a
black squall of Harleys
with Moe
Snow-Whitebeard and
“Possum
Brushbeard and their ladies
and,
sphincter-lipped, gunning,
massed in
leather muscle on a run,
on a
roll, Santas from Hell
like a
whole shoal leaning
“wide
wristed, their tautness stable
in fluency,
fast streetscape dwindling,
all
riding astride, on the outside
of sleek
grunt vehicles, woman-clung,
forty
years on from Marlon.”
Murray
was a democrat in the face of creation. He envied animals, had a natural
sympathy for losers and outsiders, and hated the snobbery of those unaware they
were snobs. David Mason has written a thoughtful tribute to Murray:
“The
poetry world is rife with simplistic pieties, unable to fathom or celebrate
complexity. Often, everything gets boiled down to an easy sense of justice.
Murray's poetry, however, defies simplistic conclusions. In Australia, poets
often distance themselves from Murray’s perceived conservative politics. But
most politicized readings of him are simply wrong, for Murray’s work is larger
than the political objections raised to it.”
1 comment:
I have always liked and admired Les Murray, and his writing, but, as often happens when someone dies, it is only in surveying the space he has left that I recognise quite how large a place he held in the literary firmament. The highest praise my devout cradle Catholic Polish friend can give is to say that someone has elements of the saintly and Les Murray, unlikely though it might seem to look at his ungainly figure and survey his, for want of a better word, awkward social manner, had more elements of the saintly than most. The world has lost not only a great poet and writer but an example of how to be good.
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