at the edge of a dark sky, where the framed door lies closed and the rain’s smooth octaves gather the last lonesome heart-beat of the summer in its mists that tap the door,
ii.
the grey air, cloud-drawn, straps its satchel to its back its stones the silvers of a silent moon,
iii.
its stones sombre and smoky, the dead of night, a crimson king a blossoming flower,
iv.
where the night’s slated roof listens to the rains urgent rushings, silver and shaded like a storm,
words of the air sinking back like the desolate waves that hush the sands as they drown their sorrows in baskets conjured out of the breath of the grey-eyed night.
v.
you kiss me and i start to swoon, i swoon like a garden rose that climbed once to the sky, a garden overgrown with the quiet of apple-coloured leaves, the summer with its vines, its leaves the bright rain drops, its leaves the visions of the air.