Michael Sharkey
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Michael
Sharkey has worked in publishing and editing, and has taught literature
and cultural studies at several universities in Australian and
elsewhere. He currently teaches writing, rhetorical analysis and
American literature at the University of New England at Armidale,
New South Wales. He has published essays, articles and reviews as well
as several collections of poetry, the most recent of which is The
Sweeping Plain (Melbourne, Five Islands Press, 2007).
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The Demagogue Writes His Program 1 Nothing in writing so hard as the start All of that countryside: where to begin? when the first buds appeared and the slow rivers surged at the unlikely sight of the sun, when the clearings were bright Later things: wandering lonely in crowds all of those flophouse proprietors waiting Lyric fluidity won in the end 2 He watched the movies in his head the headlines' chatter went in, too, at the door of his room: a modern mystic in his cell a secretary taking dictation as fast He thought of the world to come, and smiled:
Nothing To It This is the place where nothing you'd think of occurs, Visitors go down the stairs there is no space for side-by-side travel till they get to the floor of the gorge. From the floor they cannot see the top. Now they can look at the lichen, the moss, Maidenhair's perfectly still. Fiddleheads, supplejack, gorse, angel's trumpets, lantana, they met on the path. And they say they saw nothing of note,
The Plaza of Hoon The hoon is Australia's gift to the world: Cowboy of cul-de-sacs, clearways and crescents, It travels in groups like a troop of baboons Its ancestor spirits are convicts and oafs and having done that, it subsides with a grunt It's a do-it-yourself sheltered workshop So think of the people you cannot abide |