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mike-hopkins
mike-hopkins
Australian Mike has won poetry prizes in South Australia, been broadcast on radio, printed in newspapers and in a number of anthologies. His collection “Mistaken for a Real Poet” was published by in Australia in 2011, in the Friendly Street “New Poets” series. / / Mike also performs his poetry in poetry slams and readings, and has competed in the State heats of the Australian Poetry Slam. His poetry covers many forms, both traditional and modern. His topics include personal, social, environmental and political themes, often with a strong humorous element. / / John Miles said of Mike: / ‘ Here is the sardonic and wry mixed just about faultlessly with the sincere and heartfelt .. the author makes sure it is himself being looked at in any cutting light .. it turns out to be the poet himself ... held up for yet another cutting or frank touch. But there is art here as well as artfulness, in the collection showing a literate skill in poem construction, imagery and approach.’
Wilson Tuckey, I love you man the way you look over your glasses as you kick those journos’ arses I love your hairy nostrils and your square double chin but most of all I love the way you know everythin’ not a skerrick of doubt, any subject, any time you can hold forth. you’re ready to chime Wilson Tuckey, I love you man you don’t need no research. no need to hold back here is your wisdom, you’re on the attack here is the gospel according to Tuckey you front them with macho, you front them so plucky you tell them the answers straight from the heart they look like stunned mullets as you take them apart Wilson Tuckey, I love you man you run rings round those greenies, those tree hugging **** with their talk about warming, their climate change glum I trust you Wilson, you know better than them you can leave them all gobstruck with a home spun gem Wilson Tuckey, I love you man you can spot a terrorist at a hundred paces the ones with the beards and the slightly dark faces we don’t want them here taking our jobs and houses with their Qurans and burqas and baggy white trousers Wilson Tuckey, I love you man you show us what it means to be Australian some call you redneck, some say you’re not cool but you are our bedrock, you are no fool you are the brown substance of this wide, sunburnt land and that’s why, Wilson Tuckey, I really, really, really love you man.
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Nov 23, 2011
Nov 23, 2011 at 5:11 AM UTC
Wilson Tuckey I love you man
the men in their shiny arsed suits gather close to the door inhale the incense, the mothball aroma of their neighbour’s Sunday best endure the droning of the priest, who denounces the idleness of men the sinfulness of women they feel ferocious thirsts building their minds have wandered   to the pub where the publican is pulling pints of porter letting them stand, almost full, on the bar foaming, settling, forming voluptuous heads waiting for the appreciative lips, mouths, tongues of the restless church bound men. one breaks ranks, sidles out the door the others look sheepishly at each other and sidle, dribble across the road to slake their thirsts knowing that they have, barely, done their duty for the week they can, with an almost clear conscience drown their sins in the landlord’s best beer.
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Nov 23, 2011
Nov 23, 2011 at 5:07 AM UTC
Mass in the West of Ireland
**The Australian Thirteens (Black)** Your mummy took a beating Your daddy's drinking beer Your brother's lost his eyesight Your sister's disappeared The thirteens. Right on Your cousin’s sniffing petrol Your Uncle's in the cells Your buddy's begging money To spend in the hotel The thirteens. Right on And you, you make me shameful To see the state you're in I tell you live like we do But all you do is grin at The thirteens. Right on. **The Australian Thirteens (White)** Your mother’s hooked on botox Your daddy’s with the guys Your sister's anorexic She fades before your eyes The Thirteens. Right on Your daughter is a ****** Your son beats queers for fun Your priests ****** your children And you just move them on The Thirteens. Right on. You living in that city And buying all that stuff And still you look unhappy Cos you'll never have enough No The thirteens. Right on.
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Nov 23, 2011
Nov 23, 2011 at 5:02 AM UTC
The Australian Thirteens (after Maya Angelou)
My shadow has been behaving strangely in recent weeks I’ve noticed that it’s far less docile than it used to be For instance, on those occasions when I catch a glimpse of my reflection in a shop window And see an older, more stooped person than I expect My shadow is strutting upright, youthful, vigorous And then when I’m struggling to run for the bus, heart pounding My shadow is impatiently hurrying ahead, no longer so willing to wait for me I swear last week when out cycling, it tried to overtake me When I’m walking through crowds, careful not to gaze too long or longingly at the young women My shadow is **** well staring and ogling and half turning to follow them This worries me.  I’m concerned about my shadow’s state of mind I fear it is about to abandon me for a younger model
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Nov 23, 2011
Nov 23, 2011 at 5:00 AM UTC
Shadow
Every evening she beams into my living room bringing me the news of the world Juanita *** looking at me with her large eyes, gently tossing her coiffured blond hair demurely enunciating ugly words through her beautifully shaped mouth another insane event has occurred in some far off country and Juanita *** has nice red lip gloss on tonight a boat load of desperate people has reached our shores only Juanita *** can make the word "asylum" sound ****** more bikie gang trouble in the city if I had tats and a Harley Juanita, would you ride off with me? a ********** released on bail you shouldn't have to read such filth Juanita the Government’s economic policies are working who did you share your stimulus package with Juanita? another loutish sportsman has disgraced himself in public Juanita, let the sports reporter read that stuff in future Parliamentarians hurl foul language at each other in Canberra I love it when you talk ***** Juanita debate continues about the best way to tackle climate change if there was an ETS Juanita, would you trade emissions with me? she is telling me that tomorrow it will be warm and moist and Jesus Christ, Juanita *** has two buttons undone on her blouse There will be another news update in an hour but not from Juanita *** and without Juanita *** no news is good news
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Nov 22, 2011
Nov 22, 2011 at 4:39 AM UTC
I'm in Love with the Television News Reader
_                                  On                              Goolwa     Beach                                 the  waves are                                     dogged                                             bounding                                         puppies  bouncing                                 excitedly  around  your  feet                              Greyhounds sprinting  in to nip your                        ankles   Labradors  wet nosed gambolling                  slobbering      Rottweilers  snarling    slavering             knocking  you off balance          in packs        hard          on the heels of the leader           *** crazed       sniffing   the   one   in   front         mounting it    mad     things      collapsing         foaming  retreating whimpering   spent  on  the  sand     cowering  like whipped curs
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Nov 22, 2011
Nov 22, 2011 at 2:03 AM UTC
On Goolwa Beach
My son and I have made a deal he stays in our house rent free so long as he helps with the evening meal side by side we talk, dice, slice potatoes, sport, TV carrots, music, advice I could delegate the whole thing feet up, cold beer be waited on like a king or let him play a video game cook on my own he wouldn’t complain but the food tastes better is more nourishing when we work together there’s more fun more warmth in the kitchen when I cook with my son
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Nov 21, 2011
Nov 21, 2011 at 4:33 AM UTC
Cooking with my 14 year old