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Anthony Lawrence

Anthony Lawrence

La poésie contemporaine
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Anthony Lawrence

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Wind Sheer

And now the storm is inside. 

He holds himself, 
in the manner of a man unsure of his body
and what it can do, under pressure. 

She holds an umbrella, 
more as a distraction 
than some vague form of protection.

Soon, the umbrella and embrace will be gone, 
claimed by a sharp, horizontal rain of utensils 
and saliva-coated language.

He suggests the basement, 
as he’s heard that wind, when contained, 
keeps to one level and intensity. 

She leads the way, trailing rejections 
of his wind/space/velocity theory, 
though not his sincerity.

She is right. The basement is cyclonic - 
a black light fizzing in a glaze of wall sweat, 
and the contents of a sea chest, blowing 

anticlockwise like antipodean drainwater.
Upstairs, things are desperate. 
The bed has been upended and stripped, 

the sheets cracking overhead, 
the headboard a free-ranging marker 
to the death of tenderness.

Bruised and amazed, they make it to the roof.
It’s so calm, they can hear 
what the retired geologist is saying 

to his wife, three streets away, 
in the house they had made from local stone
when they were happy, in the days 

before their own internal storms 
had turned their lives 
to complex names for common rock.

In the east, the Aurora Australis 
is lighting its fires: a flaring of blue curtains 
printed with phantom town lights
ar and a leakage of stars. 
They hold each other and listen 
to the spaces between, what has become, 

below, soft buffetings, while, 
three streets away, desire is being 
assessed like a core-sample 

taken from conglomerate stone.
She puts her hands into the sky. 
They glow and then die out, but not before 

she’s said, over the audible pulsing of the night, 
Your tongue is an ultralight plane. 
My breath is wind sheer. Fly into me.  

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©  A.L.

Extrait de: The Sleep of a learning man

Giramondo Press, Sydney 2003

Production du son: M.Mechner, literaturWERKstatt berlin, 2003