Andrew
Slattery
|
Andrew Slattery is a Communications
graduate from The University of Newcastle. His poems have appeared in
literary journals, newspapers, magazines throughout Australia, Europe,
North America and Asia. His awards include the Henry Kendall Poetry Award,
the Roland Robinson Literary Award, and the Val Vallis Poetry Award. He
lives in Berlin. |
![]() |
Bathey Pelagium Having slid up and below the surface; urged itself to reach out and take the moon whole in its eye, the giant squid goes to depth – eight arms and two tentacles swirl the slick, torpedo body on an imagined course to the ocean floor. Twin front finlets rudder its frame, lining through a school of oarfish. The deeping waters start to cool its runneled core. The floor is not subject to the moon's lug. Tube worms and giant clams pulse, but seem motionless in the mudded dark, like organs under skin. The sun is cold. There are no tides or years. Giant squid rests its locomotor, it's lurked arms scan the boundary of its mantle length for food. The ocean floor is an undulant blank, with an outline so faint this whole thing could be myth. Slow-swimming along conveyor tides, it takes the ocean with it and keeps the earth in its spinning. The giant squid spools along canyons cut from the ice age – movements aggrandised over time, its organ pipes roll the sea bed, with solitary rills, hear its weight unlying the sea. Kalle Metro Graveyard Someone snuck in a cemetery. A break in the line of sandstone apartments like a tone blip in the city plan. Surrounded on all three sides by the high-rise living – the whole yard the size of a house, but thick with blooming dark grass and the pale whites of tree foliage. The centre gate is locked off and wrangles of weed truss the tall iron fence. Inside, the gravestones are edged black with granite moss and hold a calm slant, they line the ground, side by side, and some so close they seem to be one split block. Someone's decision to bury the coffins vertically. They said it would triple capacity; that it was in keeping with the skyscraping pitch of urban planning ("Drop 'em in
feet first… it'll save space.") Those too 'proper'
to be cremated; too 'proud' to end up
on the outskirts in the communal graveyard. Someone snuck in a cemetery, into the heart of a city gridded with slender cross-streets and municipal pressures. Bodies standing up cool in their boxes. They must've slid them in like a flower stem led down a tall jar. And tall runs of whiteweed rise up the fence, through the black, wrought gate latched to a sole iron pin. The grass is strewn with wraps of strange flowers, thrown over the fence by a visiting relative, or anyone whose heart the city has warmed with stone. The ground holds to the cold like the joining of bone. At night, the apartment windows flick on from all three sides, they throw down twisted squares of light and bring the flora junk and top stones out of mute dark. In summer, when the green rim of a moon arcs the night, the tall weeds lean out from the fence and dip their tips to the warm pavement.
|