Thursday, November 10, 2011

Room ZX@57899898



If a daddy long legs got drunk and its 
head grew to the size of an immense baby’s, and it caterpaultered across the First World War, and all the other deathings, and the moon fell in shells of ice....it would be time for the first green, hopeful shoots, curleying from the  little garden, hidden from the others, in the oxygenated blackness, and all twenty two fingers in the perfectly nothing lake.
































Room (AB)xZ




from       The Infinite Poem

          is  ironic, however, for it is precisely qualities such as uselessness and entropy which give minimalist sculpture its value as a challenge to illusions about the normative concept of art

             I want you to look on Bo Weinberg for your own sake and understand the terrible usage of such a man, look him in the eye if you can so you will never forget this as long as you live because in a few minutes, just a few minutes, he will be at peace, he will be over it, the ropes wont hurt he wont be hot or scared or humiliated or happy or sad or needful of anything anymore, this is the way God makes up for the terrible death, that it comes in time and time goes on but the dying is done and our persons are at peace. But you kid are a witness and it’s tough shit but that’s the way it is, you’ll remember and you can never be sure of anything again because you are doomed to live in remembrance of the foulness done to this man Bo Weinberg

                pieces of scrap iron, springs, saucepan lids, sieves, bolts and screws picked out with discernment from the rubbish heap, could mysteriously in their construction    
                     the vestiges of their origins remained visible

the language of space            the creative dance           the laugh and lash of life
       “You worry about the way I say things, but you don’t worry about what I mean.”
                  a logically possible world is any conceivable way the world might BE have been (might have be been ( might have been (might have (might

                WORD  in a modern poem is a SUBSTANCE, and OBJECT, sui generis, and uses machine parts and textured surfaces.....

                      triangle strangle the triangle trinanngle [sculpt]      I AM 
                                          feverishly interested
                                          in these questions
                      Ethics has always been where my Heart is
and the enclosed brochure tells you the facts     in secretion, the reverse might occur. it.                     
            it’s mysterious what happens:  (I Like Rust).
    A bridge or even a power pylon has a beauty which is a function of its joyous and liberating functionalism as it leaps the gap of time or space and its inherent structural dynamic
       (I love you)                          The quality of a primitive force
                                                    anchors the modern mind
                                                    to earth

the rhythmic organization of space.  Space no longer exists. Objects never end and intersect with infinite combinations of sympathetic harmonies and clashing aversions
         
         Where armies of machining ants clash and time is bent into a ring on the old father’s finger
             and Form, producing a machine-like finish, suggests that there is an absolute, ultimate form
“...there was a tremendous explosion. My first thought, and I wasn’t the only one, was that I was trapped in something like that film Towering Inferno...”
          they want to scratch out the eyes of  their enemies with  their virtue
          He loves the ampersand. And in you, too, there is much that makes me love and hope
        
  Piet Mondrian “Windmill in Sunlight” (1908) offered Mondrian the pretext to paint a violent red apparition in which the optical pulsation from the calculated opposition of primary colours across the reflecting surfaces of his brittle invention:

      The tragedy of the angry sneer, its vengeance, trap-ratted cat, crying in the box, cuboid, deep in the white hexagonal hold, the Drogons searching, phrasically, in the loop back reactions of dead significations and burning laser beams: it all falling over into the mouth. They begin to imagine symptoms.

    Alone.     Splendour.     It’s cold.      Passion.   To cross wisdom.    He’s a strategist from way back.   I don’t think she’s playing a game Pete.  Praps she is. Oh  Jesus, what a fuck up that all was.  Fuck.  Fuck.  Fuck.  Go the play.  Go to the play?.  Go to the play?Alone??  Yes, you’re always alone. Every one’s alone.
    To sail the equidistance.  Dance on an egg.   
If a daddy long legs got drunk and its head grew to the size of an immense baby’s, and it caterpaultered across the First World War, and all the other deathings, and the moon fell in shells of ice....it would be time for the first green, hopeful shoots, curleying from the  little garden, hidden from the others, in the oxygenated blackness, and all twenty two fingers in the perfectly nothing lake.

         nothing ever finally resolves, beginning again, makes a change whose origin, from the process of which was not contained in of what it originated in, whose form, is actually is something – it gets to another place
                  when it gets working it keeps on.   Switch the light.

NASA        SPACECRAFT       POISED      TO       PROBE       RED         PLANET

           the terrible red rages in spokes its fiery fireall, all is colour  -  ALL: die for it.  spill blood for colourStab for colourpuddle of red, seeded with a scattering of pink and white strokes
    Now Bob’s basic rap is that language, as an acquired  skill, is one of those loop back functions of the organism except that his units are phrasiform as opposed to word form. Likewise P is ripping off, collaging, splicing texts: completing the solipsism     The Light and the Dark seemed to know Something. Yes, it was
        the Light – like the Doors,
        Higher than God
        Had been wedged Open,
        And all the Light and Dark and Sound and Colour
        Had writhed into Being             

                                            Everything compressed back into the darkness.
                                             Shakespeare’s  brain grew  from the darkness.   

it is what it is and what it wants to be and what it struggles to become

          You’re thinking of the three pigs, said Polly. They built their houses of mud and sticks, the first two, didn’t they?        Well, I am, the wolf admitted.

                 the peremptory transmission of a logos hides the potential proliferation of effects.              What is the why of this how?                      Why does the hand descend, golden, and tagged  by the graffiti of the mathematician’s dreams, out of the hollow domed and purple folded sky

              I had the most marvellous piece of luck, I died.

              believed that the sounds, in some mysterious way, replenish the deep springs of the soul
             “I see the artists moving toward annihilation, towards becoming a voice...”       reflecting surfaces of his brittle invention.  The book’s centre is its own bookishness

               and you should have seen all those tiny infinities:
                                                                           the child’s eye
                                                                                the whale’s eye  

and the tentacles                             reaching!

Still the ravenous sea, still the gulls

Above:  “There we are.”  She said.  I yessed at her, but

It echoed into questions...I did so want
To be infinitely joined,
Or to be part of her, or in her  -  
But I forgot, the instant instant of her sound start.
I’m afraid.  I’m afraid you can never know
Us or them or we or I. Pronouns die in heroic  -
But they keep on playing that
come go come go come again game.

                               winter had come in the meadow, the whole meadow was crystal white and quite still. What are we to do? cried the  mice thru chattering teeth. Now we shall surely freeze. They all huddled together.
                
                         He had reached The Mountain of Darkness.
                 Air N.Z. up 2 cents. Ceramco down 6 cents. Lion Nathan down 9 cents.
           witty, disillusioned, with a somewhat brittle charm. Put chaos in a box – eat it.  

Not yet fifteen she wrote:  “I feel that I am a woman, a woman who has both moral energy and courage.” She died in the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen in March 1945.              

Monday, November 07, 2011

Room 'A' to base 10 exp 101.00

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     "The gashed elephant face 

             of Maungarei."                                   


                        




                                               
"The gashed elephant face of Maungarei."


                                                                                 




                                           Victor walks like Van Gogh toward the
macrocarpa trees which are not native.





The water reservoir on Mt Maungerei
                                                                  



                   

                            
                                    Every Poem is a Door

Unusual. I am awake, at 6.30.
Birds, birds. Outside,
Someone going to “work”. 
At 40 plus

I’m one of the 200,000. What
Am I doing reading, correction,
Puzzling over Robert Sullivan’s
Poems at 6.30 into sentience?

What’s that mean? – ah – “eclectic”,
Oh yes, of course! That was a good poem.
But –something’s unclear – everyone’s
Different…if I had a book of poems

I would cunningly insert some
Subtle (Smithymanic?) puzzle poems,
Disguised with guises.
But then, I don’t understand

Half of my own poems. Touche!
The booze did it last night –
Knocked me out. Then 2 paracetemols
And I wake early, and read Robert

And puzzle over poems…
These teasing tormenting riddling damning things!
But then, say the riddles ran away,
And the stories of  granddads
Because they all died of cancer

Or they stopped telling the children?

Say it was easy. The challenges would go and…

Who’d enchant our children
With funny learning tales?
Ah, these endless conundrums
Lizards after lizards…

Words. Words. Protect us from the night.

I listen to wakings
A train is somewhere.
People going to slavage?
Trains haunt me –

Drag me back.
We kids ran madly
To see the engine –soot and steam – cylindrical:
A black monster – always we nearly missed  it…

Why is? What was that thing?    That
Being I was. And my brother, and my sisters
Screaming after a train
In the long ago time of stories

And when a Policeman

Found me crying in Queen Street, lost in the crowd?
And what’s the moments of the fragments
Of  the  bits of me –
Got to do with me –

Reaching into another man’s poems
About Mangere and kids on the street
I sometimes don’t give a damn about.
(I know I should.) I’m better now…

How will I start, how shall I write this allusive,
Wriggling thing? This complex
Of deep thoughts of us All
And the jazz of the sexy real, or the music of the musical people?

Must write of chewing gum pavements and electric legends…
I live out here, by Mount Maungarei.
He’s not a lazy mountain.
But Robert, I once wrote –

“The gashed face
Of the elephant head of Mt Maungarei.”
Wasn’t I clever!
 
Every poem is a door –
Getting lostin your rooms was exciting.
Kia ora brother,
Kia ora.
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RT.  Written the morning after the launch of “Jazz Waiata” by Robert Sullivan.

22 November 1990. 

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Mt Maungarei,

Mt Wellington has a “gashed face” as Winstones wanted to quarry it away completely but were stopped in the 40s by the local people protesting to the Mt Wellington Council. The cliff (overgrown now since my days of running up it in the 50s (playing at “war”, has been overgrown: so not many people realize this - or that it was a major pah site for Maori  pre the European invasion here. Or that there was another mountain to the north of  Mt. Maungarei which WAS destroyed completely by quarrying.



[Also, this area incorporated Camp Bunn, built by the U.S. Army during the Pacific War against the Japanese fascists. Here, during the war, there was the largest ammunition dump
almost of that whole war.

Later the buildings (with corrugated fibrelite roofs) were used as store houses. They are still here. In the 50s as boy I went to the movies (the 'flicks' we called them) at Oakley Brown's picture theatre (it burnt down ca 1962 or so as he initially used the inflammable film) and he started again in Queens Road, Panmure where we saw a film each Saturday (sometimes also Sunday) for years. 'Hop a  Long Cassidy'  and other Cowboy Movies, The Three Stooges, Laurel and Hardy, Disney Cartoons of all kinds and much else.]

On  the land around extensive cultivation took place as the land here and in Mangere is very fertile, being volcanic. So this isthmus, Auckland (Akarana) or Tamaki Makau Rau was highly valued by Maori. Later in the 1820s before the Pakeha-Maori wars, Hongi Hika, the great Ngapuhi general who had been to England and even studied military books and as and Roman warfare etc and acquired numerous muskets,  attacked the Mokioa Pah which is only about 1 kilometre from Maungarei, with devastating results to local Maori who lacked sufficient guns but fought back with great bravery in battle whose outcome was by no means certain. (At one stage Hongi Hika considered retiring from the battle altogether.)

Reference to this and other matters is in such books as Maungarei by Holloway Cannibal Jack by Trevor Bentley. Link to the latter here -   

http://bookiemonster.co.nz/2010/07/cannibal-jack-by-trevor-bentley/  

In Maungarei, a book by Mrs Holloway* (once head mistress at my old school of Tamaki College who took an interest in local history and even did excavations on Maungarei.)

The NZ poet Kendrick Smithyman was greatly interested in all aspects of NZ history but also in Pakeha-Maori, and he wrote a poem re Jacky Marmon. Scott Hamilton in his own books and on his Blog "Reading the Maps" (his blog is named after the title of a major poem by Smithyman.) has rightly celebrated and promoted the work of that enormously creative and indefatigable poet (Surely one of the most original and most inventive writers of the 20th Century in any country.) Reading the Maps (the poem and Scott's Blog) are essential to understanding NZ culture, politics and history.) Possibly only Yeats, Joyce, Gertrude Stein, 
T. S. Eliot and  such as Geoffrey Hill can be considered his equal as a writer.)

I lived in the area in the 50s. [I do so now also as I came back here in 1990.] In 1966 I got job testing roading materials etc at Bitumix which is or was joint Company of Winstones. We children played around this area a lot.

The cliff fascinated us as children . As did the abandoned buildings of Camp Bunn etc built by the US military in WWII, where they had one of the biggest ammunition stores in the whole of the Pacific war.] We used to run up the south side of Maungarei imagine we were fighting WWII  I later was deeply impressed that this area might have been “wild” and covered with quite some bush ( remember that huge areas of native bush have been destroyed in NZ.) Many native birds were killed and predators introduced by sadistic pakeha in an attempt to eradicate anything “indigenous” including humans. It was all but the Nazi process of genocide. It was a Holocaust. Kauri was mercilessly culled and used for timber by profiteers. Auckland was bought for a pittance and then in few years for an enormous profit. This process of taking land by force or by legal pettifogging etc was repeated throughout NZ and left Maori impoverished, and many Europeans hoped they would die out. But Maori had run shipping businesses, flax making ventures and cultivated big areas of say the Waikato. They supplied settlers with food but were eventually attacked driven off these rich lands which were exploited by greedy profiteers and cynical farmers.

My uncle and my father came from England (London). My uncle became a research scientist at Mt Albert with the DSIR, his area was plant disease. He assisted Chinese market gardeners in Mangere and in Panmure. He was a nice enough fellow but like my father believed strongly in certain hierarchies and in fact both always supported the National Government. My uncle in fact managed a very large and prosperous Chemical Company.

But both regretted the loss of bush and the acquisition and destruction of land birds and trees etc; having come from England with its intensive urbanization.

Mangere (Robert Sullivans’s old home place) is a similar suburb of Auckland which has about 50 relatively young volcanoes on it. Rangitoto is the”youngest” (erupted about 400 years ago or so.)


* Her husband ran the Holloway Press of Auckland University.

                                                                 

  



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