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Big rain. Rain like a bastard. Continue reading

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[Dear Readers – There’s some strong language in this one. It’s not for the easily offended]
The bus is going round again. Continue reading
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Updated. I couldn’t manage to format the poem satisfactorily (which is the whole point), so here it is as a PDF. Just click on the birdy.
The currawong is a medium-sized bird, native to Australia. An example of their remarkable song is at Currawongs on youtube.

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Stars burned in bright whorls as the ship climbed out of the ecliptic. Below them the Milky Way unfurled its arms — Continue reading

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Comes the last allusion, now the final verse.
Rhythm rhyme and metre, the poem right up close.
Below’s the ending couplet, proceed along the row
One last word, two consonants divided by an o.
Run past the concluding upright, a prop
farewelled by some circle, a blot, a dot.
from which the mighty all
teeming complex
burgeoning illusory
in a finely divided instant
is smeared on an inflating
balloon blown by
a small god
hyperventilating.
Image – NASA / WMAP Science Team [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

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The blender, the former, the calibrated shrinkage.
The proofing, the blocking, the brimming. Continue reading

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… is someone’s beach-idea perfected in whale-bone Continue reading

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Dayna just won’t quit. ‘It’s three in the morning,’ she whined from the darkened bedroom.
How can anyone sleep at a time like this?