Author's note from
Editorial: 'The poem "Where the Bunyip Builds its Nest" is at once a
poetical history of Australia, a sort of showcase of poetical
language of the last 200-odd years, and a celebration of the
poets' work. The poem is 200 lines long and is made up of 5
centos (poems made up of other poets' lines). Every line is
lifted from someone else's poem. Structurally, the poem is
pretty straightforward, but readers have to make some leaps
as with any poem that selects and compresses details. I had
no particular model in mind, but it could help to think of
Ashbery's cut-up narra tives or Pound's idea of a "poem
containing history" - per haps the centos could be thought
of as mini-cantos?
The title is a take on the title poem of an 1885 collection,
Where the Pelican Builds Its Nest, by the Queensland poet
Mary
Hannay Foott (1846-1914).
The Australian Dictionary of
Biography notes that Foott's poem, "much anthologized, uses the legend that the best land outback is where the pelican builds her nest, that is, at the end of the rainbow". The
bunyip of my poem is, of course, a frightening creature of
Aboriginal legend (suggested by sceptical later persons to be
based on ancient memory of a diprotodont or similar
creature). The creature is called by other names in different
Aboriginal people's languages. It seemed to me fitting to give
the bunyip a niche among the ghostly products of other
imaginings.
I started with the early colonial period - hence the archaic
diction in the first two centos.' (p. 7-8)