I picked some self-sown violets
from my driveway edge this morning
they were wet with rain
entwined with the stems
of wild sarsaparilla—
unopened buds purple at the tips
each year this vine re-grows
despite the pruning and digging
of heavy handed men
each spring
I recall a viewing of Dogwoods
the agent’s smile fading
as our faces dimmed
with the sad aura
of the musty brick villa
I stood in the doorway…
so few rooms—were they
as cold and stale then as now?
tessellated tiles on the verandah,
cracked and broken from years of riding
this travelling clay soil
wooden-framed screen doors
closed against insects
the faint echo of a wheeze
in the beige, fifties kitchen
where night by night the words of Tree of Man
struggled for air
twenty years before my teacher
tried to interpret the great grey ordinariness
in a hot concrete classroom
looking for plot
in the bushfire, the flood, the fortitude
of the Australian everyman
when all the time the action
was in the blade of grass, the milk bucket, the fly
and a thousand unseen stars
twinkling beneath a heaving ribcage
answering the flicker of their celestial counterparts
in the wheeling, uncommunicative sky
© Julie Thorndyke