Javant Biarujia
DEATH OF AN INDUSTRIALIST
EROS (from Virilities)
                                             SONG FOR KAY YPSILON
JULES ET JAVANT
THE VILLAWOOD SERIES
I
THE VILLAWOOD SERIES
II
THE VILLAWOOD SERIES
III
AUGUST SIXTY
Javant Biarujia
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The Dutch have lately made a new discovery of the South Land in latitude of 44 degrees and their longitude 169, the draught whereof is herewith sent. They relate of a gyant-like kinde of people there, very treacherouse, that tore in peeces lymbemeale their merchant, and would have done them further mischiefe, had they not betaken them to their shipps. They make mention also of another sort of people about our stature, very white, and comely, and ruddy, a people gentle and familiar, with whome, by their owne relations, they have had some private conference. We are tould that the Dutch Generall intends to send thither againe and fortifie, having mett with something worth the looking after.
— ANONYMOUS (Letter from the India Office archives, 1691)
— ANONYMOUS (Letter from the India Office archives, 1691)
“Word has it The Affluent Society is making a comeback.” Molly was mildly sibilant. “Money supplies everything — including graft — Milton Friedman said,” countered Blum, with a wink toward the honored guest. Everyone ignored the bait. We were in the NGV’s Great Hall (another festival!), where Robyn Archer looked rather pallid under the Leonard French glass ceiling. I was thinking, how, even before Eric Westbrook’s death, Ipoustéguy’s Mort du Père had been “consigned” to storage, never to be seen again, when Blum fell once more into metaphor — as quick to retract as to advance decades, whatever that meant. Suddenly, everyone started talking at once, particularly the Nobel Laureate Friedman (the main talent), who must have been in his mid nineties by then. John Kinsella, at the podium, was reading “The Machine of the Twentieth Century …”, which was difficult to take in over the clamor. Les Murray was ranting again, like the 9/11 conspiracy theory documentary maker who kept starting his sentences with machine-gun
“Fact: No one saw a plane hit the Pentagon.”
“Fact: All American airspace was shut down, except for the Ben Laden family, who were spirited out of              the country on Airforce One.”
How the essential nature of every step — an ellipse or ellipsis — of the Wheat Belt was so unlike the city’s, from the Underground packed with workers to the rooftops brushed by the gilded wings of industry, down to the stalls and up to the gods! Kenneth Galbraith had just died, and Pramoedya Ananta Toer, too: Molly was on Java just after the fall of Soeharto, in early 1998, at the university not far from where Pram lived; on every corner, there were signs of calcined exchanges and survivors of the démokrasi terpimpin, so much so the Faculty felt it was too sensitive, too revolutionary a move to arrange a meeting. What was he thinking, what with Tempo still banned and Glodok a burnt-out hulk, when the junk we call the world was supposed to have been globalised once and for all? Blum used the word again, like a Franz Wurm you can’t get out of your head: globalised. He was sure a great deal of thinking went into it. And so the great self-made man of the Industrial Revolution, whose last memories resembled the last rites, had doors open for him even before he knocked. “Surely that was a good thing,” said the then prime minister, not looking terribly relaxed and comfortable on an original Gerrit Rietveld Blue-and-Red Chair as he was being interviewed on late-night television, “for it was, and still is, far too early to tell.”
“Fact: No one saw a plane hit the Pentagon.”
“Fact: All American airspace was shut down, except for the Ben Laden family, who were spirited out of              the country on Airforce One.”
How the essential nature of every step — an ellipse or ellipsis — of the Wheat Belt was so unlike the city’s, from the Underground packed with workers to the rooftops brushed by the gilded wings of industry, down to the stalls and up to the gods! Kenneth Galbraith had just died, and Pramoedya Ananta Toer, too: Molly was on Java just after the fall of Soeharto, in early 1998, at the university not far from where Pram lived; on every corner, there were signs of calcined exchanges and survivors of the démokrasi terpimpin, so much so the Faculty felt it was too sensitive, too revolutionary a move to arrange a meeting. What was he thinking, what with Tempo still banned and Glodok a burnt-out hulk, when the junk we call the world was supposed to have been globalised once and for all? Blum used the word again, like a Franz Wurm you can’t get out of your head: globalised. He was sure a great deal of thinking went into it. And so the great self-made man of the Industrial Revolution, whose last memories resembled the last rites, had doors open for him even before he knocked. “Surely that was a good thing,” said the then prime minister, not looking terribly relaxed and comfortable on an original Gerrit Rietveld Blue-and-Red Chair as he was being interviewed on late-night television, “for it was, and still is, far too early to tell.”
EROS (from Virilities)
The algolagnic curl of lip reveals a saw of razor-sharp teeth and, below, a smooth organ-pipe neck leads the eye down to a pair of nipples sharp as tacks. Cocteau renders the arrowhead of one soldier’s lance as well as his nipple in the same crude rendition of a couple of pencil strokes (torso as phallic trope). It is shocking. The soldiers are asleep, stripped of their firepower and weaponry — yet their nipples are standing on end! Their very sleep is minatory, predatory, arousing. Moreover, the danger of their waking is even more arousing — historically, destruction (death) has ever been coupled to creation (sex), for that is the nature of flesh and blood. Even though Cocteau may have subverted their military muscle through eroticising it, these sleeping troops’ open mouths seem nevertheless to be self-consciously sneering — as much at us as at him:
     “You can drool over me as much as you like, but I’ll never be anything more than a jerk-off fantasy to you. You’ll never have it off with me!”
     “You can drool over me as much as you like, but I’ll never be anything more than a jerk-off fantasy to you. You’ll never have it off with me!”
                                             SONG FOR KAY YPSILON
O cataminetails lubricate perinaeum
cockswell jewels of your beefcakeyouth
JOe Dallesandro the motive s Parlyaree:
“ilovey oun omore idoi dontil ove yo unolo”
grOaning lout cumuppance loinfetish
sticky physique chesthair and tattoos vis-à-vis
chrOnicled costersscouch Nash
ville hornyyodel “boyskeepswinging”
cowbOy the whole hole loose too subtle
omeepolone translucent hardon boyjoy
StratOs homos au [un]naturel moist openings
lay a lad arsecheekbyjowl bumbuddies fuck
i was fifteen when i decided to kill myself i came home from the school social kissed mother goodnight and went to my room and closed the door from their hidingplace i got out the bottle of barbiturates i stole from fathers medicine cabinet and a jug of water i started writing a simple note which i propped up against the bedhead when finished i drank all the water for their acrid taste i lay down on my bed and waited to pass out i convulsed then vomited a mess of halfdissolved pills on the carpet i lay awake all night finally watching the sun rise my mother came into my room in the morning and saw what i d done but didn t say a word | “I was fifteen. I had made up my mind to die. I locked my bedroom door. I placed a spirit-stove under my bed, which I raised up with some books: it was to be my funeral pyre. I lit it. I lay down on my bed and cut my wrists with my razor.” He showed them his thin white scars. “Blood spurted out, fast at first, but then stopped. I passed out. When I came to my mother was by my side, the doctor was there, and my wrists were bandaged.… The bed had not burned so well, but badly enough for the cook to see smoke filtering out through the top of my door, which they broke down.”      “What did your mother say?” Lucie asked.      “Not a word.”                          — HENRI PIERRE ROCHÉ |
for Kent MacCarter
Kathy Acker draws on a cigarette
blinding sunlight to the sputniks gesture
after the collaboration — Thom Gunn
is that what they teach in lit class these days?
lsd versus astrology class
Kathy Acker draws on a cigarette
airplanes thread round fish and generation
y kiss substitutions and discuss words
after the collaboration — Thom Gunn
it started with the left but the right —
over a martini discuss Arkley
Kathy Acker draws on a cigarette
orchids for Ashbery or O’Hara
ordure for Oppenheimers atom bomb
after the collaboration — Thom Gunn
Harry Houdini and Arthur Miller
object as they turn over in their beds
Kathy Acker draws on a cigarette
AFTER THE COLLABORATION — THOM GUNN
for berni janssen
“How can we make this inhuman?” they ask
like refusing to write Es or plurals
manusia is indonesian for human
being a typewriter giving it up
for lent or longer as a one off protest
“How can we make this inhuman?” they ask
perahu is another indonesian
word to which our word “prow” is related
manusia is indonesian for human
perfected it — let me detain you the
lyrics of a Sia song? Her wigs sigh
“How can we make this inhuman?” they ask
now ruminate our old men perfect-
ing it ecstatically falling down!
manusia is indonesian for human
possession is nine tenths of the law — the
banshees wigs are no more than a chador
“How can we make this inhuman?” they ask
MANUSIA IS INDONESIAN FOR HUMAN
in memoriam Gough Whitlam & Malcolm Fraser
the poets genius of consciousness
or politicians power to mimic
are left to justify their means to an end
it s metaphysics — the beauty of change
contemplating Mallarmé or Narcissus
the poets genius of consciousness
Heidegger with his taboos and terrors:
us ships carriers planes over Sydney
are left to justify their means to an end
politicians sing     our highest court says
papers lives revolutions nostalgia
the poets genius of consciousness
dance in the beds they have made up themselves!
off to lonely Canberra bells ringing
are left to justify their means to an end
politicians love the sound of their own
voice chattering champagne beer shunting off
the poets genius of consciousness
ARE LEFT TO JUSTIFY THEIR MEANS TO AN END
Oh Time! the beautifier of the dead
— BYRON
For last year’s words belong to last year’s language
— T. S. ELIOT
— BYRON
For last year’s words belong to last year’s language
— T. S. ELIOT
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 | one day “as one August gust on another” one day [1914] Derains autopsy of organisms purling one day the metronome unsteadily and very prolonged one day — the next day — “If I should die out there, for now I’m in the firing line” one day trees a boatload of blood one day [1944] all the bridges in Florence except the ponte vecchio are blown up thru unrestrained boredom one day [1962] the woman with the girly voice dies and is bourgeoisied in crypt 33 of Westwood cemetery one day [1916] those Casement briefs and diaries [1945] out of fire Hiroshima centaur Robrothel Hughes dies [2012] one day [1949] LeRoy Gorman haiku + cllgrmm = Chvrlt one day [1994] victorian police are like bulls in a china shop one day [1815] Bonaparte is exiled [1969] Charles Manson starts his killing spree [1977] The Red Robins in New York one day [1945] putrid Nagasaki night lamps extinguished one day in 1957 Michel Leiris dreams of Asia one day [1900] René Crevel is born to infinite castration one day [1934] James Tenney is born to electrocatachresis one day [1956] Jackson Pollock dies from color decapitation one day [1966] The Village voices Frank O’Haras chiasmus one day [1762] Tiepolo flute concrete poem his eyes burning one day [1827] William Blake dies from acanthus hats one day [1977] south London national front contradiction controversy corruption crash deceit by definition one day [1040] Macbeth kills Duncan to be king of Scotland one day [1951] Citizen Kane dies from desire under the sun one day [1871] Rimbaud as Alcide Bava wrote to Banville one day [1939] stood the primal despair of The Wizard of Oz one day [1926] Lew Welch was born to whom The Kindness of Strangers by Philip Whalen was dedicated one day [1953] Jean Cocteau his diary echoes dragons repetitive earthquakes any shadow can be changed one day [1933] Michel Leiris dreams of islands cities the sea inside a levantine pearl scherzando lichanos empty vessels [1930] the two halves of the Sydney harbor bridge meet one day Timothy Learys epanadiplosis [1961] overplays this day one day [1857] Charles Baudelaire must suppress six of his poems and in 1882 the 1812 Overture premières in Moscow one day [1943] Blaise Cendrars couldn t sleep for ten years as he started hapax legomenon on his life with gipsies one day [1911] Guillaume Apollinaire is raided by the police one day [1997] Guillaume Burroughs dies from epanalepsis one day [1942] epanorthotic shoes cross the Volga one day [1973] the fata morgana of Stockholm hallucinates one day [1955] “a system of metaphor for the allegory (Keats called it)” the meaning of life/corps exquis one day [1900] Nietzsche with tears in his eyes one day [1941] Akhmatovas jukebox Поэмы без героя one day [1883] “it s like Krakatoa in spring!” my friend Anthony was fond of saying as he joked about serial poetry one day [1813] evolution execution exile failure fake fame one day [1959] personism was born with a female voice one day [1963] i have a dream hermaphroditic stop thief! one day [1988] Sontag called it a firing squad day one day [1874] o lost one! post coitum triste omne animal est one day [1977] Mansours flash card submissiveness Q: if it was a few days before the earthquake in 1923 A: were fortune tellers acquainted in 1923 with free verse? rue de Furstenberg is my favorite spot in Paris |
Javant Biarujia