Tag: A dark green shadow cements

  • Colour Gives it Rhyme

    Colour Gives it Rhyme

    A dark green shadow cements
    A soft green streak
    To the casuarina and a white fence
    That keep company with a creek.
    Home to a feathered menagerie
    Let loose to wing and wade
    They colour-in the canopy
    From crimson through to jade.
    A blue wren flits nervously
    In the absence of its mate,
    A kingfisher sits furtively
    Pleasured by its wait.
    . There’s more to this than space and time,
    . It’s the colour gives it rhyme.

    © Tim Grace, 24 September 2010


     

    To the reader: Waiting in space and time, keeping company with self, watching a menagerie of birds occupy a green dell; a copse of sorts. The image is pleasant, but there’s an underlying tension, as the verdant space is in constant dispute. The nervous twitch of a wren, the furtive posturing of a kingfisher, all signs of trouble in paradise. Unresolved shadows steal the certainty of green.

    To the poet: Descriptive poetry relies on a strong visual scaffold. There needs to be a solid structure from which the scene can emerge as worthy of note. In this sonnet, the childhood memory of colouring-in washes over the text with a thin pallet of greens, blues and a white fence to both divide and contrast the scenery. The mix of colour and message gives the poem a satisfying tonal blend of imagery.


     

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