Created
May 20, 2009 04:18
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By James K. Baxter
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Auckland, you great arsehole, | |
Some things I like about you | |
Some things I cannot like. | |
I came to the Art School, carrying the paintings | |
Of an eighteen-year-old chick. | |
On the door of one room somebody had written 'life' | |
But there was death inside it. | |
A skeleton hung there by a hook in its skull | |
Its ribs brown with earth, age, or varnish. | |
The statue of a Greek god lay on the floor | |
With his prick and balls knocked off by a chisel. | |
'Alison,' I said, 'they've buggered the god of death, | |
They've cut the balls off the god of love. | |
How can their art survive?' | |
'Roimata ua, roimata tangata - ' | |
The tears of rain are falling, | |
Tears of rain, tears of men. | |
I went to Mass at Newman Hall, | |
Then visited the Varsity Cafeteria | |
With six Catholic aquaintances. | |
One wanted to show me the poems he had written, | |
One talked about the alternate society, | |
One wanted to convert the world, | |
One girl in glasses gave me the glad eye, | |
Another praised the pentecostal movement, | |
Another hoed into his plate of cheese and camel turds. | |
I said, 'Excuse me a minute, there's a Maori friend of mine, | |
If he doesn't get a place to crash tonight | |
The cops will pick him up for the four crimes | |
They dislike most in Auckland, | |
Not having a job, | |
Wearing old clothes, | |
Having long hair, | |
Above all, for being Maori. | |
When they shift him to the cells in the meat wagon | |
The last crime might earn him five punches in the gut. | |
Could any one of you give him a night's lodging?' | |
They were extremely sorry. | |
The bourgeois Christ began to blush on the Cross. | |
The Holy Spirit squawked and laid an egg. | |
One had landlord trouble, | |
One had to swot for exams, | |
One was already overcrowded, | |
One didn't know exactly, | |
One still wanted to show me the poems he had written, | |
And the last one still silently consumed his plate of camel turds. | |
I took the Maori lad to Keir Volkerling's place. | |
He slept on a mattress in the bathroom. | |
Keir was not a Christian, or a student. | |
He worked ten hours a day | |
Digging drains or mixing concrete | |
To support an average of twenty-five people | |
Who would otherwise have been in jail | |
For being out of work, | |
For wearing an old coat, | |
For having their hair down to their shoulders, | |
And above all, for the crime of being Maori. | |
Christianity has weakened my brain cells, brother, | |
I haven't got the fortitude of Keir Volkerling. | |
The Auckland Varsity gives me a pain in the rectum. | |
I am waiting for the day | |
When its wedding cake tower goes down in a pile of rubble | |
From a bomb planted by an intelligent boobhead | |
Or a not-so-intelligent Varsity radical. | |
The Auckland Art School gives me a pain in both my testicles. | |
They don't know the best of Illingworth. | |
They admire the worst of McCahon. | |
Why not burn the Art School down | |
And get some old houses and do a bit of painting | |
Either with a brush on the ceiling | |
Or with a brush on a bit of canvas? | |
I paid a visit to an old friend | |
Who used to write some good poems. | |
The door of his office was painted black and yellow, | |
The color of the plague flag. | |
'Peter,' I asked him, 'could you spare me a dollar?' | |
He looked unhappy. | |
He was putting on some ceremonial robes | |
For a meeting of the University Council. | |
'I'm sorry, man,' I said, | |
'I didn't mean to interrupt you.' | |
Outside his office the wind rustled | |
Dead leaves on the concrete pavement. | |
I shook hands with an old moss-grown statue | |
And went barefoot down the road. | |
Auckland, even when I am well stoned | |
On a tab of LSD or on Indian grass | |
You still look to me like an elephant's arsehole | |
Surrounded with blue-black haemorrhoids. | |
The sound of the opening and shutting of bankbooks, | |
The thudding of refrigerator doors, | |
The ripsaw voices of Glen Eden mothers yelling at their children, | |
The chugging noise of masturbation from the bedrooms of the bourgeoisie, | |
The voices of dead teachers droning in dead classrooms, | |
The TV voice of Mr Muldoon, | |
The farting noise of the trucks that grind their way down Queen Street | |
Has drowned forever the song of Tangaroa on a thousand beaches, | |
The sound of the wind among the green volcanoes, | |
And the whisper of the human heart. | |
Boredom is the essence of your death, | |
I would take a trip to another town | |
Except that the other towns resemble you exactly. | |
How can I live in a country where the towns are made like coffins | |
And the rich are eating the flesh of the poor | |
Without even knowing it? | |
O Father Lenin, help us in our great need! | |
The people seem to enjoy building the pyramids. | |
Moses would get a mighty cold reception. | |
They'd kiss the arse of Pharaoh any day of the week | |
For a pat on the head and a dollar note. | |
At another time in another place | |
Among the Ngati-Whatua | |
When they brought the dead child into the meeting house | |
She opened her eyes and smiled. |
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