Ice arcs through the air like solid lightning. The large bolts strike with a rumble and clatter to rest where they gleam with bravado at the dispirited winter sun. The small bolts explode with a skittering hiss and trickle down between the bricks, prodigal drops returning to the watertable. Cast out from its plastic host, the ice bears grooved testimony to their symbiosis, but this testimony concedes to the crafting thaw a bevel smoother than a human hand could fashion. Some ice lies clustered on the brick paving like terra incognita wrought on a vellum map by the feverish imagination of an Olde World explorer. Some lies scattered among the purple and white alyssum in imitation of a Tyrolean spring. As a breeze releases the olfactory history of myriad fridge dwellers, a cloth rings over a wire tray in a crude arpeggio which segues into the basso profundo of the resurrection hum. The cycle begins anew.
Copyright Andrew M. Bell. The poet wishes to acknowledge the Naked Eye anthology (Western Australia) in whose pages this poem first appeared.