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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2010-08-29 | |
Five o'clock morning rain,
a kookaburra watches me from the cherry tree; birds coming to market, pedalling their squeaky wheels like crazy, pedalling their rained-on wares. 'Here's a beau-u-uty!' one of them calls, holding up the morning like a Chinese peasant displaying an orange-feathered duck. The kookaburra scoots a monorail arc from cherry-tree to blackwood, its wings pumping corduroy air. The longer I live in this place, the more I see it: the dead branches of a wattle fuzzed in luminous green winding sheets; the dark and private places at the undersides of blackwoods; the silkiness of rye-grass heads drooping purple in the rain; the native grass along the fence-line yellowed, as though pissed upon. The longer I live here, the more I smell the fresh neck-sweet loveliness: the faint resin of Adventure Bay pine; the homely motherliness of the rain, drowsy and lethargic, splatting a blue milkiness on the grass, splotching a lazy fattiness on the verandah roof. A lone red-hot poker nods by the edge of the floorboards; suddenly, a tiny honeyeater alights to prod at the upside-down sweetness up inside. Just as precipitously, it whirs away, leaving the flower standing, a shaggy plastic toy beacon in the underwater, five o'clock gloom.
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