Liam Ferney
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Liam Ferney is a Brisbane poet whose work
has been published in Australia, New Zealand and North America. His first
collection, Popular Mechanics, was
published in 2004. It's follow up the
french word for 'voyage' should eventually be raised from the
depths of the Marianas Trench sometime around 2010. |
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Kurilpa for Paul all those flat whites & what was the name? shopping for bargain bin westerns after the donuts while the day kept it's blistering silence like the coal station at black diamond bay given as a gift to the jungle. with no where to go i drink beer with fish & banished cheap music but i remember you making machiatos where the cats played sax before you shopped for kalashnikovs, gunja by the kilo at a 3rd world truck stop. they were beautiful days tables adorned with tulips and skulls where renegades retired & we are ready to assume the poise of our generation. common music betrayed by static, the treachery of an fm ocean. Iron Lion Scion As abandoned as drive-in's, tracer fire no longer fireworkflecks the six o'clock news and the friends he made in Barcelona have all upped stumps, migrated to Angola. So he spends lunch hour's lolling at the lights, the cavalcade of unspecific grooming, a crimped starter at the boom where we all go bust, melting figurines of Posh and Becks puddling on the high table, the slow waltz with the sticky palms and dystrophic hearts. You've cancelled your appointments but there's no point apportioning blame on the circus tent revivalists preaching at the riverbank or a hedge fund backed Buddhist retreats. The aficionados swear by the tune in the tumult a detached viola, adagio on the kitchen radio. That's how Black Tuesday sounds on a website, there were warnings but they were polite and for once the phoney doctors are right: "Coin is clarity, that much is bankable," (you're holding it long until the ever after) "call our hotline," that's what they say coming down off the millennium like a bad pill on a good day. some nights the heat Coming home
The brave and the free These are not good days with the Gipper
still on TV, |