Poem in asymmetric transparency


after Margaret Preston’s Waterlilies (1921), oil on cardboard, Castlemaine Art Museum, Sybil Craig Bequest, 1990

This one’s not about throwing cake at Thea.
Or even balancing mindfully what grows out of mud.
Hint of gold on lacquered river —
beauty with a dangerous edge?

You need to imagine downstream in time.

The sturdy stem of a cut-glass
[thingy] outside the frame.
Not the hyper-object of climate change, but still.
How is water more transparent than?

Three lotus lookalikes floating in solar darkness.
No chronos, post-human. No despair, either.

After the collapse of everything,
after entropy has coated the tongue,
the post-natural might just surrender to

three referential petals in asymmetrical
night-scented geranium: motile
cadmium outside the bowl.

Shari Kocher

Shari Kocher is an Australian poet, fiction-writer, researcher and therapist. Her two books of poetry are Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Highly Commended for the NSW Premier’s Literature Awards Kenneth Slessor Poetry Prize 2022) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Highly Commended in the Anne Elder Awards 2015). Kocher holds a PhD from Melbourne University. www.sharikocher.com

More by Shari Kocher ›

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