Blog posts

  • We’re getting out of this shithole (digital collage, 20220717)

    We're getting out of this shithole (digital collage, 20220717) Stephen J. Williams
    We’re getting out of this shithole (digital collage, 20220717) Stephen J. Williams

    The image above is a simple digital collage combining two photographs: a photo of a man escaping fires in Spain in 2022; and an interior of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome.

    There is another version of this image that combines the collage with generative AI to create a wider view of the imagined scene.

    We're getting out of this shithole (digital collage and generative AI, 20220717) Stephen J. Williams
    We’re getting out of this shithole (digital collage and generative AI, 20220717) Stephen J. Williams

    And a video created with generative AI …

    We’re getting out of this shithole (digital collage and generative AI video, 20220717) Stephen J. Williams
  • [Mostly there is just this]

    Mostly there is just this
    emptiness, being

    ignorant of truths
    that might make us happy.

    Dreams peopled by strangers
    I’ve become familiar with,

    tonight, the stranger is a lover
    rejecting me and accepting me.

    “I’m afraid of you,” he says
    as we begin the slow rock.

    “And I am afraid of you.”

  • Review of A crowd of voices in ‘Small, poignant details of hell’, The Weekend Australian, 1986

    If the Auschwitz Poems [by Lily Brett] are minimalist, those of A crowd of voices often teem. It seems unreasonable to insist that a writer has only one voice, or that a collection should be unified, but too great a variety can make a book harder to talk about and such a collection can become a teasing thing when one discovers something one likes, only to then turn the pages vainly for something else like it.

    There are many different forms in A crowd of voices—‘free’ verse, more structured rhymed poetry, ‘prose’ poems, stories—and many different tones and styles, from the wryly intellectual or cooly speculative to the lyrical or stridently engaged, and from the Tranteresque ‘The High Price of Travelling’ to a touch of Robbe-Grillet in ‘X Equals X’. The subjects, too, are just as various.

    One’s attention is shifted constantly, rarely encouraged to settle. In this way the book does become a crowd of voices, but, as often in a crowd, it is hard to hear what anyone is saying.

    The great risk of such writing is of mere cleverness, and Williams does not always avoid it. Too often—although there are lines, images, whole poems enough to prove that it can do more—the poetry engages the mind only, or seems more concerned to display a range of reading, talent and contacts than to explore a subject or emotion.

    And, as when a sort of necessity leaves the writing, or the statement of feeling is not strong enough to shape itself, a touch of rhetoric enters the work (here mainly anaphora, the repeated use of the same opening word or phrase).

    For all my reservations, however, the book is entertaining and alive with promise, and I shall await Williams’ next with interest. A crowd of voices was awarded the Anne Elder and Mary Gilmore prizes for a first book of Australian poetry. It is not hard to see why. There is abundant talent, and more than a touch of the poet here; all that he wants is direction.

    David Brooks

  • Review of A crowd of voices, in ‘Mordant and threatening behind the bright detail’, Sydney Morning Herald, September 1986

    Stephen J. Williams is a very good poet, whose promise is attested by his Mary Gilmore Prize, awarded for a first book of poetry by the Association for the Study of Australian Literature.

    The cover of A Crowd of Voices features a Peter Booth painting. Williams’s most effective poems are similarly mordant, even threatening, behind the pantomime of occasions and bright detail. Even his jokes, like Booth’s beasts and fancy dress, are disturbingly serious.

    Williams is tantalised by what lives behind blank spaces in a text, behind cult images and trendy behaviour, behind ideas and obsessions. ‘Epic Red’ and ‘Burning Poem’ are the most obvious examples.

    You can burn an argument by falling silent,
    though a word is logically uninflammable.
    You can burn the midnight oil, have a burning
    ambition or burning desire, burn money or
    burn time. . . You can burn Dresden,
    or burn Hiroshima, or burn the world.
    Anything that burns or should not burn, that
    you can burn, other people can burn, too.

    Williams’s parody-ripostes to John Tranter and Rae Desmond Jones are some of the best contributions to current poetic writings of this type. In many of his poems you feel a large power of poetic analysis—this weight is behind even the lightly-touched-in allusion to a photograph, Mario Giacomelli’s ‘Scanno’.

    Judith Rodriguez

  • «A crowd of voices» [contents]

    «A crowd of voices» [contents]

    A crowd of voices was first published by Pariah Press (Melbourne, Australia) in 1985. It won the Fellowship of Australian Writers’ Anne Elder Award and the Association for the Study of Australian Literature’s Mary Gilmore Award.

    for Deanna H.

    Contents


    Cover image — Artist : Peter Booth (Australia, b.1940) Title : Date : -1981 Medium Description: oil on canvas Dimensions : Credit Line : Purchased with assistance from the Visual Arts Board Australia Council 1981. Image Credit Line : Accession Number : 203.1981 Used with permission of the artist.
    This book was published by Pariah Press (Melbourne) in 1985. Pariah Press was a coöperative publishing company and its small print-run books did not have commercial distribution.
  • The high price of travelling

    Even though our eyes are bruised
    from reading all the daily news,
    we think of Rome and Paris in the Springtime,
    of telephoning long lost friends,
    of leaving our hearts on tables in expensive restaurants.

    We are like terrorists edging toward some word
    of reason our commander never speaks.
    We begin by opening a book on holidays
    in Uganda, which has a preface telling how
    to sit quietly in living room chairs
    while they become electric with possibilities,
    and read a chapter showing how to move
    our eyes to the corner of their sockets
    so that we can look (without having the appearance
    of looking) at things we do not want to see,
    then flick the pages for some clue
    on how to get there, but all we find
    are reasons not to go.

    It is yet another year of no holidays
    in Uganda, where we could travel
    with lists of missing persons,
    sit and look at complacent animals burning
    in the hot light, and the chance of not seeing ourselves
    would be unlikely.

  • Epic red

    Light up the sky red
    with a red blaze — not blood
    red, not even a patriotic flag
    red that could be politically
    hazy and scared red — but a
    brilliant and artificial red
    like good communists make
    in factories. Then paint.
    Paint the house, embassy,
    the politicians, dictators,
    tyrants, all the ordinary
    people and their comrades;
    paint them all top to
    bottom and the middle parts
    too, especially the penises.
    Bright red penises of Russia
    standing up to be counted
    for mother country. —And
    don’t forget the women:
    the women who take out
    their finest brushes to
    paint the red lines in
    the eyes of their sons.
    They get down on their hands
    and knees to wipe the paint
    off the factory floors;
    they stand at sinks for hours
    scrubbing the paint spots
    out of their husbands’ shirts;
    they wait outside the operating
    theatre when paint messes the
    mechanic’s table; they cry
    and scream the throat of Russia
    red-raw till the whole land
    coughs up blood. Ordinary
    people understand this sort
    of red. It’s the red leaders
    use for wild speculations and
    artists paint radiant futures
    with it. Red is an image
    by itself. Red is hell. Red
    is unnatural, oppressively hot.
    Red like the inside of a mad
    animal’s mouth. Blood-sucking red.
    Red on the screen of the blood
    film. Historical red. The color
    of revolution red. The red hammer
    of education. A red sickle
    to chop off heads. A shade of red
    to blame for everything. Women’s
    red. Menstruation red. Red
    faces and red sex. Red rage.
    Who made the Red Sea red?
    The Russians did. Who invented
    red herrings? The Russians did.
    Who built the pyramids?
    The Russians did. Who shot down
    the Korean plane? The Russians
    did. Who made America what
    it is today? The Russians did.