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Amy Dwyer Aug 2013
On the winter-swept platform,
Pools of water, like lakes of molten silver
Some, mirror-like, hold pieces of clear, blue sky
Others, melancholy, grey clouds.
Elsewhere, on the road. Puddles,
lagoons in a desert of tarmac. A tyre,
sending out teardrops of pewter.
Briefly they capture galaxies of light.
After, they meld back into the black surface
Where they wait, for one more flight in the sun.
Amy Dwyer Aug 2013
We know as children that you shouldn’t stare directly at the sun,
“You’ll go blind!” parents say. Still, we take mischievous glances,
Scared, brave. Trying to separate the perfect, lemony roundness, from the burnished halo all around.
I remember standing on the front path of my Aunts house,
Eagerly waiting for a solar eclipse, the pebbledash grazing my back.
4 children staring boldly through a square of tinted Perspex. It was novel.
The first time I looked at you, I looked away, eyes glaring, seeing white.
It was like looking at the sun, I needed the dull, brown tint.
Eyes adjusted. “Hiya!” you yelled. Golden

In the moments after the rain,
Look at the sun, in the moist air hangs a rainbow;
Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
You’ve worn them all, not a colour left alone.
Joseph looks on, jealous, in his dull, lifeless overcoat.
You’re a solid rainbow, one that you can touch, feel, put your arms around.
Laugh with, learn with, drink with, dance with, love with.
A rainbow personified.

For L.C

— The End —