I used to love watching Londoners watch the moonrise. At such times, a metropolis can feel like a village; strangers may actually find themselves having spontaneous conversations in one of the most uptight places on earth. The famous views become even more instagrammable: Let no one drink alone with the moon ever again! And the dogs running off-lead in the park, rolling ecstatically in the grass wherever a vixen had sprayed her scent.
open moon—
someone's fingertip making
a wine glass sing
***
lyrics for an imaginary pop song
eyes on
her wing bones
hot tattoo summer
the voyeur finds
his gaze thwarted
by skin turned screen
close your eyes
and see more
with augmented reality
pay no attention
to the smell of smoke
behind the curtain
***
Ridgetop cellar hole for a collier's hut. Two hundred years ago, this mountain was a smoking ruin.
An oak that started growing about that time.
Another oak that started growing about that time. Not too long ago, it seemed sturdy enough to get married under. Sic transit gloria mundi.
The charcoal fed the forge in the gap; the forgeman might've seen the mountain before it was entirely denuded. It was he and his family who settled it when clearcutting made it affordable. I suspect it had been a place of wet meadows and rhododendron thickets where forge workers liked to go on picnics, gather ginseng and sassafras, go hunting, etc.—a backyard wilderness even as devastated as it was.
***
A click beetle lands in my lap and seems unable to escape, given its strategy of trying to, I guess, freak predators out by snapping its body several inches in the air—and landing right back in the same spot. I take pity on it after six or seven clicks and give it a flick.
Whippoorwill, crickets, an occasional katydid. The moon isn't due up for... a while. As for me, I'm going down to the house and up to bed.
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