Low-Key Festivities
The way the wind blows is roguish today. It ties knots
in loose hair, chucks tree debris, tugs at moorings. One pheasant attempting
flight is held at a hover till it gives up. Clouds are pushed till they fall
into one fuzzed grey spread.
Indoors, a busy oven: the last of the pumpkin seeds roast, a pan of butter
boils to ghee. The floors are swept and we are indecisive about the washing.
Drive home from work under a dark sky, not one
firework appears.
There are evenings when we have stood, bundled in outdoor padding, sighing at
flagrant fires in the sky: tiny against mountainous flames: writing shapes with
fizzing white heat: thrilled by the tar barrels: ears crackling with luminous
shrieks.
Indoors, behind the Rayburn door, coals and hand-hewn logs form an orange opal
underworld. The flames are lazy, magnificent, mauve-tinted.
Comments
(I don't want to be like the pheasant.)
I don't think we are pheasants. They are clumsy movers, very reactionary :-)