Tuesday 19 January 2021

Murray Sings the Broad Bean

 I came across this poem by the late great Australian poet Les Murray while I was browsing in an anthology, and thought I would post it here for wider enjoyment. It's a bravura piece of descriptive writing, shot through with Murray's hyperacute visual sense and utterly distinctive imagination. No one else could have written such a description of a row of broad beans – no one else, perhaps, would have thought to do so. It's called a 'sermon', and begins with an image of a 'slack church parade' and the sound of 'trespass against us' in unison, but Murray has nothing to teach beyond the one great lesson: pay attention, look at what is there...

The Broad Bean Sermon

Beanstalks, in any breeze, are a slack church parade
without belief, saying trespass against us in unison,
recruits in mint Air Force dacron, with unbuttoned leaves.

Upright with water like men, square in stem-section
they grow to great lengths, drink rain, keel over all ways,
kink down and grow up afresh, with proffered new greenstuff.

Above the cat-and-mouse floor of a thin bean forest
snails hang rapt in their food, ants hurry through several dimensions:
spiders tense and sag like little black flags in their cordage.

Going out to pick beans with the sun high as fence-tops, you find
plenty, and fetch them. An hour or a cloud later
you find shirtfulls more. At every hour of daylight

appear more than you missed: ripe, knobbly ones, fleshy-sided,
thin-straight, thin-crescent, frown-shaped, bird-shouldered, boat-keeled ones,
beans knuckled and single-bulged, minute green dolphins at suck,

beans upright like lecturing, outstretched like blessing fingers
in the incident light, and more still, oblique to your notice
that the noon glare or cloud-light or afternoon slants will uncover

till you ask yourself Could I have overlooked so many, or
do they form in an hour? unfolding into reality
like templates for subtly broad grins, like unique caught expressions,

like edible meanings, each sealed around with a string
and affixed to its moment, an unceasing colloquial assembly,
the portly, the stiff, and those lolling in pointed green slippers ...

Wondering who’ll take the spare bagfulls, you grin with happiness
– it is your health – you vow to pick them all
even the last few, weeks off yet, misshapen as toes.

2 comments:

  1. So agree. Look, be, see. I came across this little video of Murray the other day, which I think captures perfectly the Australia he came from and loved, perhaps you have to know it to love it, I don't know, to me it is very evocative:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpcnmoskGRk&feature=youtu.be

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  2. That's lovely, Zoe – thanks.

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