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Where the Sea Meets the Desert

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      On "The Blaze of Obscurity":
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      From "Cultural Amnesia":
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      On "North Face of Soho":
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      From "The Meaning of Recognition":
      • On the Australian Poetry Boom
      • On Pushkin
      • On Polanski's "The Pianist"
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      On "The Meaning of Recognition":
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      From "The Book of My Enemy":
      • The Great Wrasse
      • The Lions at Taronga
      • Where the Sea Meets the Desert
      • Lucretius the Diver
      • Occupation: Housewife
      • In Town for the March
      • Deckard was a Replicant
      • Simple Stanzas
      On "The Book of My Enemy":
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      • Independent
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      On "As Of This Writing":
      • LA Weekly
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      • Asian Review of Books
      • Telegraph
    • Books Out of Print

    Antony and Cleopatra swam at Mersa Matruh
    In the clear blue shallows.
    Imagine the clean sand, the absence of litter —
    No plastic bottles or scraps of styrofoam packing,
    No jetsam at all except the occasional corpse
    Of a used slave tossed off a galley —
    And the shrieks of the dancing Queen as the hero splashed her
    While her cheer-squad of ladies-in-waiting giggled on cue,
    The eunuchs holding the towels.
    With salt in her eyes did she wrinkle the perfect nose
    Of which Pascal would later venture the opinion
    That had it been shorter (he didn’t say by how much)
    History would have been different?
    They were probably both naked. What a servant saw
    Did not count. They might even have boffed each other
    Right there at the water’s edge like a pair of dolphins
    Washed up in the middle of a mad affair,
    With her unable to believe the big lunk would ever
    Walk away from this, and him in his soul
    Fighting to forget that this was R&R
    And there was still the war.

    There is always the war. The Aussies in Tobruk
    Could hear the German bombers at El Adem
    Warming up on the airfield
    For the five-minute flight that is really the only distance
    Between bliss and blitz.
    Ears still ringing from kookaburras and whip-birds
    Were heckled by Heinkels.
    When Antony eyeballed her Coppertone tits and bum
    He was looking at Actium.

    Shake it, lady.
    Shake it for the Afrika Korps.
    Where the sea meets the desert there is always,
    There is always the war.

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