“THE TAWNIES” by Catherin J Pascal Dunk

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for Venie Holmgren

Daily walk, dusk on Maple,
an upwardly mobile family
spots me first.

One swoops from jacaranda,
golden-eyed, flashing a death stare—
startles me halfway there.

Two more shadows fleet,
cryptically absorb
in cedar tree, harden.

I drop, perch low
in my gutter, house dress
riding high; knickers exposed.

Humans dwell so noisy—
clashing music, outdoor phone calls,
dinner clatter.

Temperature inversion
heightens it all, so I’m jumpy,
tugging my skirt;

my upper-deck family’s speechless—
but soon the fledgling’s
breathy hunger-whine

is unremitting;
and she dances her head
like a galah on Colorbond.

Mama, watchful tree jockey,
claw-toting hunter, rides
the sawn-off branch.

Papa stays close—bristly
whiskers, widest gape
and gouty toes.

Supper might be microbats,
moths, woodroaches—
several spiders would serve.

Respectfully chary, those tawnies
say grace till, crick-necked,
my head’s off on its sensory round:

red geranium’s leaf under nostrils;
cheek to feathery fans
of Persian silk tree;

sniff the equinoctial air
for Melaleuca quinquenervia,
like a koala with chlamydia.

Revisit all these, on repeat,
while morrows remain.

Previously published on Wordflower

4 respuestas a «“THE TAWNIES” by Catherin J Pascal Dunk»

  1. Avatar de Catherin J Pascal Dunk

    Thank you Nolcha for publishing this!

    Le gusta a 1 persona

    1. Avatar de crazy4yarn2
      crazy4yarn2

      You’re welcome, Catherin!

      Le gusta a 1 persona

  2. Avatar de Catherin J Pascal Dunk

    I love this picture you found Nolcha!

    Le gusta a 1 persona

  3. Avatar de crazy4yarn2
    crazy4yarn2

    I’m so happy that you’re happy with it!

    Le gusta a 1 persona

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