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	<title>Chris Emery — poet and publisher</title>
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	<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com</link>
	<description>home of the poet and literary publisher, Chris Emery</description>
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	<copyright>Copyright &#xA9; Chris Emery — poet and publisher 2010 </copyright>
	<managingEditor>chris@chrishamiltonemery.com (Chris Emery — poet and publisher)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>chris@chrishamiltonemery.com (Chris Emery — poet and publisher)</webMaster>
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		<title>Chris Emery — poet and publisher</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com</link>
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	<itunes:summary>home of the poet and literary publisher, Chris Emery</itunes:summary>
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	<itunes:category text="Society &#38; Culture" />
	<itunes:author>Chris Emery — poet and publisher</itunes:author>
	<itunes:owner>
		<itunes:name>Chris Emery — poet and publisher</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>chris@chrishamiltonemery.com</itunes:email>
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		<item>
		<title>Interviews can be so distressing — take Carl&#8217;s job &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2011/09/15/interviews-can-be-so-distressing-%e2%80%94-take-carls-job/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2011/09/15/interviews-can-be-so-distressing-%e2%80%94-take-carls-job/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2011 15:18:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I like interview poems and here&#8217;s an example from my forthcoming Salt collection The Departure. It&#8217;s a rather sinister interaction that slowly unfolds. I hope you like it. I&#8217;ve no idea what period it&#8217;s set in, but I do know it&#8217;s not now — and it&#8217;s located somewhere in New York City, somewhere a little <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2011/09/15/interviews-can-be-so-distressing-%e2%80%94-take-carls-job/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/smp/9781907773150.htm"><img src="http://www.saltpublishing.com/assets/covers/648/9781907773150.jpg" width="300" border="0" /></a></p>
<p>I like interview poems and here&#8217;s an example from my forthcoming Salt collection <em>The Departure</em>. It&#8217;s a rather sinister interaction that slowly unfolds. I hope you like it. I&#8217;ve no idea what period it&#8217;s set in, but I do know it&#8217;s not now — and it&#8217;s located somewhere in New York City, somewhere a little seedy, somewhere you wouldn&#8217;t want to take your mother. Carl&#8217;s in for a rough time. He&#8217;s no idea who he&#8217;s talking to.</p>
<h2>Carl’s Job</h2>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
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		<itunes:subtitle>
I like interview poems and here&#8217;s an example from my forthcoming Salt collection The Departure. It&#8217;s a rather sinister interaction that slowly unfolds. I hope you like it. I&#8217;ve no idea what period it&#8217;s set in, but I do know [...]</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>
I like interview poems and here&#8217;s an example from my forthcoming Salt collection The Departure. It&#8217;s a rather sinister interaction that slowly unfolds. I hope you like it. I&#8217;ve no idea what period it&#8217;s set in, but I do know it&#8217;s not now — and it&#8217;s located somewhere in New York City, somewhere a little seedy, somewhere you wouldn&#8217;t want to take your mother. Carl&#8217;s in for a rough time. He&#8217;s no idea who he&#8217;s talking to.
Carl’s Job</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>News</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>chris@chrishamiltonemery.com</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
	</item>
		<item>
		<title>A new interview with me about poets and technology</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/06/09/a-new-interview-with-me-about-poets-and-technology/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/06/09/a-new-interview-with-me-about-poets-and-technology/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jun 2010 19:51:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=221</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a new interview with me discussing poets and technology over at Nic Sebastian&#8217;s Blog Very Like a Whale. 1. Characterize your general attitude as a poet towards technology. The end of hope. No, I’ve worked with new technology in publishing for almost twenty years, so a lot of my immediate thinking here centres around <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/06/09/a-new-interview-with-me-about-poets-and-technology/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a new interview with me discussing poets and technology over at<br />
Nic Sebastian&#8217;s Blog <a href="http://verylikeawhale.wordpress.com">Very Like a Whale</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>1. Characterize your general attitude as a poet towards technology.</strong></p>
<p>The end of hope. No, I’ve worked with new technology in publishing for almost twenty years, so a lot of my immediate thinking here centres around mark up languages like XML, XLink, XPointer, metadata, issues around discoverability, granularity, fragmentation, standards, subject classification, topic maps (remember them?) tagging and so on — the seriously boring end of things: the kind of stuff that gets cited in the divorce proceedings. The kind of stuff that ends up in sentences that start with “He was a real loner all his life…” I’ve been working on a new database system that encodes poetry for ePub and Kindle products, but that might seem a rather constrained and reductive way to approach this question! I love programming XSLT conversions, and thinking about XSL-FO and how we might auto generate books from vast corpora of tax returns. It’s a bit sad. It’s a lot sad, actually. I think technology is a metaphor for bereavement.</p>
<p><a href="http://verylikeawhale.wordpress.com/2010/06/02/10-questions-on-poets-and-technology-chris-hamilton-emery/">Read more…</a></p></blockquote>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Four poems from “Radio Nostalgia”</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/04/10/four-poems-from-%e2%80%9cradio-nostalgia%e2%80%9d/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/04/10/four-poems-from-%e2%80%9cradio-nostalgia%e2%80%9d/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Apr 2010 08:14:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=219</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Radio Nostalgia Paperback 92 pages November 2005 ISBN 1-904614-19-1 Here are four poems from Radio Nostalgia &#8220;The Journey&#8221;, &#8220;Loose Meat&#8221;, &#8220;Black Flake&#8221; and &#8220;The Curtain&#8221;. Amazon.co.uk Widgets]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.saltpublishing.com/assets/covers/648/1904614191.jpg"  width="50%"/></p>
<h2><a href="http://www.arcpublications.co.uk/catalogue/book.php?description_id=307">Radio Nostalgia</a></h2>
<p><small>Paperback<br />
92 pages<br />
November 2005<br />
ISBN 1-904614-19-1</small></p>
<p>Here are four poems from <em>Radio Nostalgia</em> &#8220;The Journey&#8221;, &#8220;Loose Meat&#8221;, &#8220;Black Flake&#8221; and &#8220;The Curtain&#8221;.</p>
<p></p>
<p><SCRIPT charset="utf-8" type="text/javascript" src="http://ws.amazon.co.uk/widgets/q?ServiceVersion=20070822&#038;MarketPlace=GB&#038;ID=V20070822/GB/chrisemery/8001/16169968-7306-4761-aa50-b223abac1666"> </SCRIPT> <NOSCRIPT><A HREF="http://ws.amazon.co.uk/widgets/q?ServiceVersion=20070822&#038;MarketPlace=GB&#038;ID=V20070822%2FGB%2Fchrisemery%2F8001%2F16169968-7306-4761-aa50-b223abac1666&#038;Operation=NoScript">Amazon.co.uk Widgets</A></NOSCRIPT></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<itunes:duration>0:01:08</itunes:duration>
		<itunes:subtitle>
Radio Nostalgia
Paperback
92 pages
November 2005
ISBN 1-904614-19-1
Here are four poems from Radio Nostalgia &#8220;The Journey&#8221;, &#8220;Loose Meat&#8221;, &#8220;Black Flake&#8221; and &#8220;The Curtain&#8221;.

 Amazon.co.uk Widgets</itunes:subtitle>
		<itunes:summary>
Radio Nostalgia
Paperback
92 pages
November 2005
ISBN 1-904614-19-1
Here are four poems from Radio Nostalgia &#8220;The Journey&#8221;, &#8220;Loose Meat&#8221;, &#8220;Black Flake&#8221; and &#8220;The Curtain&#8221;.

 Amazon.co.uk Widgets</itunes:summary>
		<itunes:keywords>News</itunes:keywords>
		<itunes:author>chris@chrishamiltonemery.com</itunes:author>
		<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
		<itunes:block>no</itunes:block>
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		<title>Events unfolded</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/events-unfolded/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/events-unfolded/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Feb 2010 07:34:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Work in progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=213</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Another poem driven out of a workshop challenge from Roddy Lumsden, though this naughtily ignored the terms of the challenge and was co-opted by news events unfolding in Austria and the USA of family&#8217;s held in captivity. The Fritzl case was one thing echoing in my mind. Then there was the Garrido case. But the <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/events-unfolded/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Another poem driven out of a workshop challenge from Roddy Lumsden, though this naughtily ignored the terms of the challenge and was co-opted by news events unfolding in Austria and the USA of family&#8217;s held in captivity. The Fritzl case  was one thing echoing in my mind. Then there was the Garrido case. But the poem isn&#8217;t about either story — it&#8217;s all about a fractured narrative using the soundscape of news reportage and our relationship with stories of kidnapping and the idea that our neighbours can be secretly monstrous.</p>
<h1>Petrol Lives</h1>
<p><br clear="all" /><br />
Several concave children gave evidence<br />
of internal heating deficiencies, ghosts, they said,<br />
even when the next farm was ‘kiss-my-ass’ republican</p>
<p>it would consist of ‘abominable behaviours’ though<br />
we knew parenting was edible pulp.<br />
Anyway, Lucy’s relatives were all cholesterol.</p>
<p>Boiling was never a precise art, not like<br />
having hives and the itching would not subside<br />
for days. ‘Creaking is leaking,’ the factor said.</p>
<p>For now make contact with low-ceilinged<br />
housing units and use the yellow jersey<br />
sweater Maud brought from Saffron’s, </p>
<p>the ‘turkey-handed waster’ as we knew her.<br />
Powering up the certain suit was all cluster<br />
and bluster. No one packed it in. No one moved.</p>
<p>Several planes coalesced into a single black basin,<br />
pin columns of bronze integument failed to hold<br />
the listless creepers. Motion sickness everywhere,</p>
<p>even the loyal hangers-on seemed biting and thick.<br />
No synapse provided proof but the buttresses<br />
left the cellar housing all wishy washy. ‘It was like a pit</p>
<p>of fat. We knew they were in the oil. He was a loafer, too.<br />
Never coming out.’ The desk sergeant made calls:<br />
one with a giant gland and uppity manoeuvres </p>
<p>which held the bones of the family together,<br />
the other, long distance, was less secure, ‘I can break him.<br />
He will cry with the teeth of it.’ On ring back now.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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		<title>A little heresy does you good &#8230;</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/a-little-heresy-does-you-good/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/a-little-heresy-does-you-good/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Feb 2010 00:05:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Work in progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=210</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Third Church of Christ Psychopath In the Third Church of Christ Psychopath no ruined mothers may pray for dust. Occasionally unelected Elders order random executions of executives that priests on weekdays covertly choose as saints. And large-scale whippings often ensue on traditional Nights of Holy Disaffection. Such nights being wholly charged with miraculous bouts <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/a-little-heresy-does-you-good/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>The Third Church of Christ Psychopath</h1>
<p><br clear="all" /><br />
In the Third Church of Christ Psychopath<br />
no ruined mothers may pray for dust. Occasionally<br />
unelected Elders order random executions of executives<br />
that priests on weekdays covertly choose as saints.<br />
And large-scale whippings often ensue on traditional<br />
Nights of Holy Disaffection. Such nights being wholly charged<br />
with miraculous bouts of ritual boasting from the grave.<br />
On Tuesdays, steel crosses are recycled in each parish<br />
for the conversions of the famished poor, whom we adore<br />
as divine atrocious food, all gristle and lice. And obese<br />
flagellants repose on the designated benches, staring at<br />
a prostrate sea, their incandescent robes signifying still<br />
neglected island martyrs, stalwarts of the recent purges,<br />
for whom most pray for dunkings in the Hermeneutic<br />
Lake of Blood. And idealistic Wednesday pogroms<br />
in season still flourish, where, through the provinces,<br />
bishops in shabby wigs ride pigs through the streets,<br />
stopping only to piss on the lewd exiles of the Faith.<br />
Everyone takes time to share god&#8217;s lesson of venomous<br />
absence with the sad pathetic Council of the Damned.<br />
And all the while, itinerant priests continue calling on tall<br />
houses in the city, lecturing insomniac Magistrates<br />
and Councillors on the indecency of science<br />
and the amnesty of lies.</p>
<p><small>First published in <em>New Writing 8</em>, edited by Tibor Fischer and Lawrence Norfolk (Vintage, 1999)</small></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Valedictory poems</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/valedictory-poems/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/valedictory-poems/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Feb 2010 23:58:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Halving There is a place I could feel at home beneath a catastrophe of wires in this white evening under plastic stars I could feel all the warmth of the room endlessly in glass in all its orchestrations and might leaning through wet eyelids with the valley held in frame despite or beyond the singing <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/valedictory-poems/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Halving</h1>
<p><br clear="all"/><br />
There is a place I could feel at home<br />
beneath a catastrophe of wires<br />
in this white evening under plastic stars<br />
I could feel all the warmth of the room<br />
endlessly in glass in all its orchestrations and might<br />
leaning through wet eyelids<br />
with the valley held in frame despite<br />
or beyond the singing shade where kids<br />
parade in toiling sheets laughing there,<br />
under the hills, under last year’s windows and black bricks,<br />
the black earth with its island kisses there —<br />
and in that place of tobacco and sticks<br />
and seed-strewn avenues, poured at dusk,<br />
filled with hosepipes, rag and bone men and musk —<br />
coal-defined, small, so small, where the roads<br />
turn before a regimented horizon<br />
to take away the girl, to take away the codes<br />
love ladles in, as the lovers run<br />
taking the sales reps and their families<br />
into the future deserts filled with flies,<br />
into the son’s sour contralto cries,<br />
beside the boiling copper lies;<br />
there is a place I could feel at home,<br />
with street names and clangour and dogs<br />
locked in warm sheds beside a green lawn<br />
and all the dread and all the wishes, knocks<br />
and skirmishes, and wise hugs,<br />
would leave us semi-carnal on the rocks<br />
of a magisterial sea, the radio features there,<br />
from a red summer and in that fine archipelago<br />
of thin shouts one sleep would do me there,<br />
one tiny sleep would really do for me and you.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Poem for my father</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/poem-for-my-father/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/poem-for-my-father/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Feb 2010 23:53:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=204</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Weapon for Isobel Dixon Waving hello through the Fiat&#8217;s fumes, we were waving goodbye, a film in amber fields of Cornish shade and wheat, yellow jerseys and a crop duster — that Corsair — hurling its shoulders over seven-year-old dream-white air. You had yellow fever in some antic grey chassis, too, mid- Pacific, gauntleted, <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/14/poem-for-my-father/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>The Weapon</h1>
<p><em>for Isobel Dixon</em></p>
<p>Waving hello through the Fiat&#8217;s fumes, we were waving goodbye,<br />
a film in amber fields of Cornish shade and wheat,<br />
yellow jerseys and a crop duster — that Corsair —<br />
hurling its shoulders over seven-year-old dream-white air.</p>
<p>You had yellow fever in some antic grey chassis, too, mid-<br />
Pacific, gauntleted, hung at my mother’s lips, that hand-painted<br />
lilac studio shot laying near your sack of home, now twenty years apart.<br />
In the end you waved from the car to me, crying some way in to life,</p>
<p>and at your breakable neighbourhood return: ripped up, corseted,<br />
the surgery over, the coming months became love&#8217;s parasite<br />
and you became my upholstery of broken evenings, knowing summer static.<br />
But I broke free with all my feelings ending empty in a weapon.</p>
<p>HMS Devonshire, there I see you scrapped in shaking loyal air,<br />
you are breathing in a new Korean din, and I&#8217;m inside a future destitution:<br />
breathing still foreshortens time. I&#8217;m almost your age now.<br />
A mouthful lies between us then in some disgust of stories and a past,</p>
<p>I am dwarfed beside you in that summer field, a child in mewling montage.<br />
How can we love what’s not bestowed, in the happiest<br />
prize blood brings? My life has always been this weaker separation since.<br />
Plied in that robbery of nows, as you piled in your pillows, too.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Seated, hands planted firmly, so</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/12/seated-hands-planted-firmly-so/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/12/seated-hands-planted-firmly-so/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Feb 2010 23:33:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Work in progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=191</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Writer He sits in the fraying shirt with epaulettes, hands placed squarely on the knees, so, loyal perhaps, back taut. He sits in the beach-dreck chair facing the south window, the long, taupe, negligible oblong, where we hear (should we lean) such tremendous sounds as the landscape affords. He imagines tart packages of darkness <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/02/12/seated-hands-planted-firmly-so/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>The Writer</h1>
<p><be clear="all" /><br />
He sits in the fraying shirt with epaulettes,<br />
hands placed squarely on the knees, so, loyal perhaps,<br />
back taut. He sits in the beach-dreck chair<br />
facing the south window, the long, taupe, negligible<br />
oblong, where we hear (should we lean)<br />
such tremendous sounds as the landscape affords.<br />
He imagines tart packages of darkness in rotation,<br />
winds over plantains, young birds, rasping yards<br />
and, wrapped under the torrid roots, the thin worms<br />
glistening in their white sinecures, eating the past.<br />
We cherish his hard back. We stand behind him and work<br />
around the den to see his grey ears, thick sideburns,<br />
then notice the sudden fuchsia ridge, the blackened<br />
accoutrements of the smashed face. He’s all caved in.<br />
Days pass. Years. We wander. How could we not wander<br />
about his intense, heavy frame. We watch the faceless one<br />
watching, a damaged cuckold watching the shade<br />
over the skins of the timbers, the skins of the walls<br />
settling in the lank tableau. We are moving like hair<br />
in the powdered light over the atrocious basin<br />
of the head, until we notice the mirror sharply recovering<br />
the battery and disgrace and find we are seated alone,<br />
loving again in the wild escutcheons of the days. </p>
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		<title>The family have been informed</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/the-family-have-been-informed/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/the-family-have-been-informed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 17:35:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Work in progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=184</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This piece stems from the Bush/Cheney days. I still like it. It&#8217;s fascinating watching British TV now, as the whole war is disentangled in an understated, completely devastating way. A monstrous saga, still not at an end, and powered by abstract conviction about the world and its desirable shape, its desirable resources. One is left <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/the-family-have-been-informed/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This piece stems from the Bush/Cheney days. I still like it. It&#8217;s fascinating watching British TV now, as the whole war is disentangled in an understated, completely devastating way. A monstrous saga, still not at an end, and powered by abstract conviction about the world and its desirable shape, its desirable resources. One is left wondering if it was really about the oil, and more about some sense of structural legacy, a fear, ultimately, of impotence.</p>
<h1>From the Centre</h1>
<p><be clear="all" /><br />
Once your eyes have adjusted to the burning<br />
scan through those racing battalions:<br />
that mouth, idle elbows, and then tilt your head like this<br />
to observe an arranging sea of grit. You can sense</p>
<p>the singing or crying, crying or singing,<br />
where it is a high-throated sort of commotion<br />
for the day. Anyway, no one wings it<br />
in the compound. We’re poverty in motion.</p>
<p>How we ended up here is funny, like a shiny<br />
belly or bare flank, or it could be that ash-<br />
coloured, hose-damp concrete there.<br />
Every child distorts the man, and man the cash.</p>
<p>Look at it raining down — sordid, localised love<br />
beside electric couples filming, or are they fleeing,<br />
the gift. It is an entirely live feed while we learn scripture<br />
from wire. Someone says, ‘Nomads in waiting,’</p>
<p>as we become scintillating, free in the debris.<br />
Don’t catch life out, then, and watch the traffic.<br />
Now you know when the slap up meals fall out<br />
of those sacks we’ll be taking home our pick</p>
<p>of your bomb-retiring heroes, day and night,<br />
night and day, those clean-cut silent flags of ham-<br />
burger heaven still warm under props. Later we’ll<br />
be zooming or seething through that dream</p>
<p>up dislocated arterial routes, shaky gorgons<br />
in the zone. Together again, we are a modern fog,<br />
the idea of the better dead, immortalised grey<br />
eyes above subtitled totally idealised dialogue.</p>
<p>No one adheres to the precise terms any more.<br />
The streets shiver like widows this afternoon of very<br />
large government, we’ll ape out the speeches<br />
of the ape. Our country is his artery.</p>
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		<title>A family affair</title>
		<link>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/a-family-affair/</link>
		<comments>http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/a-family-affair/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 08:29:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>chris_he</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Work in progress]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chrishamiltonemery.com/?p=178</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s another filmic poem. I like to write from the perspective of a film maker, and often move around the poem in the way a camera man would. Checking the angles, looking for the cut away shots, adjusting the lighting to build the scene up. This poem takes place in an undetermined Latin American town. <a href='http://chrishamiltonemery.com/2010/01/28/a-family-affair/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s another filmic poem. I like to write from the perspective of a film maker, and often move around the poem in the way a camera man would. Checking the angles, looking for the cut away shots, adjusting the lighting to build the scene up. This poem takes place in an undetermined Latin American town. A small town. There&#8217;s an element of threat in the piece, which is another thing I like to see engineered into a poem. Some risk. Some tension.</p>
<h1>Eduardo</h1>
<p><br clear="all" /><br />
Our fine neighbour, Eduardo,<br />
known locally as ‘an hour with the pig’<br />
is folded in viridian evening beside blocks and hooks.<br />
Folded neat and hot, he is all helmet-like.</p>
<p><em>Teeth grind of moped. Lolloping begonias.</em><br />
He plays Carmina Burana considering workaday beauty,<br />
yet it is a bad Decca recording and he tires of it. He loves justice on TV<br />
and the weekly surgery of romance: the doomed brides.</p>
<p>‘Eduardo,’ they shout. ‘Do not sleep at your sister’s place tonight.’<br />
He is pinched up considering his inept grasp of planets,<br />
He is everyone’s fastidious shark, happily cutting, cutting,<br />
cutting to the end.</p>
<p>Fermina does not have his weakness for display.<br />
She is emboldened by her single mole, a loyal creature<br />
beneath the mighty storm and a century of town smoke.<br />
‘She will phone tonight,’ Eduardo says, </p>
<p>‘and discuss the shapes of her cabaret, her sour winds of love.’<br />
Eduardo imagines crudely that her mattress is the horn of plenty<br />
despite his abhorrence of winter perfume<br />
and spitting gutters. There are no coyotes.</p>
<p>He chews on the spandrels of some grey meat<br />
and picks out sequin pips for Fermina’s wan retrieval this evening.<br />
There is so much affection in his brother’s gaze.<br />
Lodged inside the weathered purse of his face he is quite terrible. </p>
<p>He has always procrastinated over business meals like this.<br />
Fermina will be revered inside a new family procedure<br />
where we shall leach from out our shadows towards the stitches of stars.<br />
Our mouths are gaping now in the drapery behind her.</p>
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