Search Results for: poetry

Almanac Poetry: mors, mortis

Kevin Densley marshals a veritable cavalcade of famous dead writers and pictures them in typical, bordering mundane, behaviour from life.

Almanac Poetry: ‘Summer’s Tadpoles’ – Tommy Mallet

The call of the frog is a blissful sound on a rainy night suggests Tommy Mallet in his poem ‘Summer’s Tadpoles’.

Almanac Poetry: Birds

In this week’s poem, KD presents a specific and highly individual take on the avian class.

Almanac Poetry: ‘The Great War – AIF Suite’

Kevin Densley’s ‘The Great War – AIF Suite’ poetry collection is as timely as ever on Anzac Day. Read on for some poignant and arresting reflections on Australian soldiers who fought in World War One. [For ANZAC Day 2025 we reprise Kevin’s reflective set of WW1 poems- ED]

Almanac Poetry: Empty Football Oval on a Saturday Afternoon

What’s in an empty oval? John Gordon offers two thoughts, both full of insight and meaning.

Almanac Poetry: Stone and Darkness

We reprise Kevin Densley’s moving poem for Easter Sunday, set at dawn in the precinct of St Paul’s Cathedral, Melbourne.

Almanac Poetry: The Ballad of Alexander Pearce

Kevin Densley suggests you read his poem this week with “fava beans and a nice bottle of Chianti” for reasons which will become obvious. [We are giving KD’s poem prominence again because of the reference to Alexander Pearce in a recent Ian Wilson piece.]

Almanac Poetry: Three Photographs from the Early Life of Frances Scott Fitzgerald Lanahan Smith (1922-1986)

‘A prime candidate for ‘The Great American Novel’, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, turned 100 this week. This centenary has been observed in numerous ways around the world. To mark the occasion, KD reprises his poem about Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald’s only child, daughter Scottie (Frances Scott Fitzgerald).’

Almanac Poetry: What Happened at University This Week

According to KD, this week’s poem ‘is based upon an event which occurred during my time as a uni teacher, and reflects, in part, upon the tedium of work meetings’.

Almanac Poetry: Gorillas in the Mist

This Monday’s poem is based upon ‘an event that took place decades ago’, according to KD. For him, it is as much about one of his favourite rhyming slang terms, as anything else: ‘gorillas in the mist’, or more succinctly, ‘gorillas’.

Almanac Poetry: Boys’ own footy with handpass

We welcome Black Pepper whose first poem is a memoir about make-do footies. [Ah, yes. Ed.]

Almanac Poetry: Haiku Bob – Round 2: the blur

Some haiku reflections from Collingwood’s match against Footscray by Haiku Bob.

Almanac Poetry: How to Use a Hammer

Step 1: Get a hammer. Step 2: Find a nail. Step 3: ??? This week’s poem by Kevin Densley gives us his simple how-to guide for using a hammer. A tool for more than one occasion perhaps?

Almanac Poetry: The Poet Who Got the Grant Instead of You

This week’s poem by Kevin Densley is a humorous take on the role of ego and rivalry in the literary community. [Contains mild coarse language]

Almanac Poetry: Google Earth

Google Earth images – in particular, those of Street View – can certainly be striking, according to Kevin Densley’s poem. [Contains mild mature themes]

Almanac Poetry: Glad Day!

Stripped of artifice, Kevin Densley’s previously unpublished poem takes raw inspiration from William Blake’s work.

Almanac Poetry: ‘Warm Grey Silver’ – Tommy Mallet

The peace of an ‘exiquisitely still night’, a sleeping child, and a vegemite sandwich help pass the time for Tommy Mallet as he awaits his next call to work.

Almanac Poetry: ‘Less’ – Tommy Mallet

Reflecting the diminishment of time.

Almanac Poetry: ‘Grip and Release’ – Tommy Mallet

The moon, a late night, and the day ahead feature in Tommy Mallet’s poem ‘Grip and Release’. [Language Warning – Ed]

Almanac Poetry: Another Song for Severed Head

Kevin Densley describes this week’s (previously unpublished) poem as one ‘about the nature of creative ideas and creativity more generally’.