Published in Overland Issue 209 Summer 2012 · Uncategorized Recrossing the Styx Berndt Sellheim Il faut être toujours ivre. The hardest working man in the Pantheon Charon ferries only kebabs now, demands his obol from the walking dead staggering the Oxford strip, tabouli and tahini on pita easy on the hummus. Having so discarded the curving scythe for bent aluminium tongs he claims no further loyalties future or past and carves ununionised through skewerings of meat, his new electric blade. So you can’t stop progress. That’s what it all means. A quick slide to the end of days, old men and apples. The morning harvests such tentative light to be a promissory note toward all endings — here being the world washed grey; here a dying earth. Of course it’s nothing so dire. Café Falconer’s a stroll down the road. It’s open too and you know the coffee’s good, and those widening gyres can yet be vaulted with a few unsteady steps. This is only the ancient mythologies departed. No facts but meanings, no detail but the map. You know, doesn’t it all look the same to you? Isn’t that sun finally pushing Homeric fingers through Rosie’s winter foliage (pinked yellow russets like the jaundice of chemo) revolving yet amongst heavenly spheres? The same orbit. The same star. Only heaven changed. And here we are. Olympic Gyros 6 a.m. Posters on the wall of the crumbling acropolis, tourists milling throughout the grease spots, absent as ghosts. Such being the risk of late night revelry get off the bus and you might just end up here, searching out a few coins lost amongst the lint, locked in some deepthroat with death. And it’s fourscore’n ten if you’re lucky, and if you’re not, well Berndt Sellheim Berndt Sellheim is a Sydney based writer and academic whose work has been published in Australia and internationally. His first novel, Beyond the Frame’s Edge, will come out with Fourth Estate in May 2013. More by Berndt Sellheim › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 5 February 20255 February 2025 · Art A poetic argument for restitution: Isaac Julien at the MCA Sarah Schmidt Once Again... (Statues Never Die) invites viewers to engage deeply, rewarding those willing to invest time contemplating its layered narratives. Transformative in its complexity, seductive in its visual literacy, it offers a space for empathy, education, and debate, emphasising how museums can serve as platforms for confronting contested histories and inspiring social change. 4 February 20254 February 2025 · Indigenous Australia Teaching Palestine on stolen Indigenous lands Charlotte Mertens Refusal is not only possible, it generates different worlds. Refusal insists on the possibility of alternative anti-colonial futures and ways of being. Refusing the University’s erasure of Palestine involves a collective effort in thinking on how we will teach Palestine, the ongoing settler colonial violence and what this means for a place like Australia.