John Kinsella

2003

Chainsaw

The seared flesh of wood, cut

to a polish, deceives: the rip and tear

of the chain, its rapid cycling

a covering up of raw savagery.

It is not just machine. In the blur

of its action, its guttural roar,

it hides the malice of organics.

Cybernetic, empirical, absolutist.

The separation of Church and state,

conspiracies against the environmental

lobby, enforcement of fear, are at the core

of its modus operandi. The cut of softwood

is deceptive, hardwood dramatic: just

before dark on a chill evening

the sparks rain out – dirty wood,

hollowed by termites, their digested

sand deposits, capillaried highways

imploded: the chainsaw effect.

It is not subtle. It is not ambient.

It is trans nothing. A clogged airfilter

has it sucking up more juice –

it gargles, floods, chokes

into silence. Sawdust dresses boots,

jeans, the field. Gradually

the paddock is cleared, the wood

stacked in cords along the lounge-room wall.

A darkness kicks back and the cutout

bar jerks into place, a distant chainsaw

dissipates. Further on, some seconds later,

another does the same. They follow

the onset of darkness, a relay of severing,

a ragged harmonics stretching back

to its beginning – gung-ho,

blazon, overconfident. Hubristic

to the final cut, last drop of fuel.

New Poems: Peripheral Light, W.W. Norton, New York, 2004