Philip Hammial
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Philip Hammial has had twenty collections of poetry published, two of which were shortlisted for the Kenneth Slessor Prize - Bread in 2001 and In the Year of Our Lord Slaughter's Children in 2004. He is also a sculptor (33 solo exhibitions) and the director of The Australian Collection of Outsider Art. Photograph 2006: Philip with his daughter Genevieve |
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Help
With a little help from a reader we could crawl up onto the back of a bicycle & blow. A horn? If you like. Or a kiss? Maybe, but first a question – what is your aim? To kill swimming? For a closure to swimming a kiss won't do. Better a horn, its blue. With a little help from a reader we could wear the same face for both, for the grown men asleep in a bucket, for the children snoring in a thimble & not care which belt we've been trained up to. With a little help from a reader we could blend the desire for hearing with the desire for speaking & come out on top with meat to burn, your choice of kangaroo or stork. With a little help from a reader we could home rule the market women AND their troublemaking husbands, them to houses confined until some progress in basting & roasting. With a little help from a reader we could insist that our at-a-crossroads-style becomes us & everyone after us, even the marchers as to heaven. With a little help from a reader we could be joined by an Alice whose relationship to history however tenuous is precisely the joinery that our journey requires. With a little help from a reader we could swallow the first & the second & even the third word & even, if some truth was thereby accomplished, the whole of the poem.
Socks
So you really think we've established a case for bliss? Stand up in court for how long? – two minutes if we're lucky. Which reminds me: some joker
has taken all of the socks from my sock drawer & filled it with forks with bent tines, all the better to eat what with? Our last supper for two was a disaster. Served by nuns
in a forest clearing, we were constantly distracted by a klatch of monks who insisted that happy slaps (as per those on London buses) could induce instant liberation. A kind of pudding? Sue
those slap-happy bastards. For what? Their bowls? Their beads? Count to ten while I put this flesh to one side, for later. Right now there's work to do. We need
to set up for the next scene – a carriage at rush hour, Aunt Jane getting on at Redfern for her morning performance, will squat & pee as we roll into Central. Watch out
for your shoes. Socks still missing. Stand up in court in piss-splashed shoes, no socks, our case for bliss? Two minutes if we're lucky.
A Ball
You saw it on NAGS, the scratch channel, how friends in black can breed with friends in blue & at the end of nine have a worthwhile product, a ball, say, that you can bounce wherever you like. Why not
in a casbah? It's speech as though by magic translated into Arabic, you'll break the spell of Delmonico (the lion tamer ripped apart by his seven lionesses). These urchins
will love you; they'll let you live to tell the tale: how camels, having negotiated the perils of the Pont Neuf & the cobblestones of Rue Dauphine,
eventually arrived in Oran with three rimes & a metaphor into which anything, even a recipe for a homemade bomb, could be stuffed.