Modulated Ashfield
Summer burns brick-red, bitumen-hard;
old pavements, patched cement,
cut light, spit quartz.
Shirts pegged to westerly winds parch
paper-dry; dandelions flick
a yard of wired suns at my feet.
All day cloud towers build
over tiled rooves; next door,
renovation shells the pre-war flats:
drills scream, hammers bang and bang
to hits of the 70s-80s-90s,
a clamour of hot hours
‘til four, when tools are downed.
The wind shifts, cloud darkens.
Birds wing the silence. From
an open window somewhere,
blue trumpet lines of jazz
float in jacaranda,
quivering now as shadows breeze
brick flats and washing lines, ripple
grass behind the sandstone wall
where cemetery dead sleep, inured
to modulating passions. Leaves
strew, the green sky cracks, and
rain-tempered notes
hit the road,
steaming.
Great! Love
ReplyDelete' From
an open window somewhere,
blue trumpet lines of jazz
float in jacaranda,'
thanks Robbie. that detail was the catalyst for the poem, so I'm glad it speaks.
ReplyDeletewow, nice one, Jill!
ReplyDeleteI did like 'plosives'?
ReplyDelete