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Issue 12 Winter 2009
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by Alison Leonard
Hardly time to tune up among the tussocks, thrift and tormentil above the giant’s basalt hexagons
before the opening notes from Fingal’s band burst from the cliff page as you dot off the stave and back,
this hungry earth-ledge hurling you to nothing, till nothing holds you, adrift on serried feathers between
thermals and the bubbling sea-mirror, leaping as you do for risk, for life,
the nothingness of wave-borne air become your element, until your inner baton says enough
and whirrs you, blurred as violin bows, legs your golden drumsticks, back to the trampoline of land,
and there you perch, a golden interval in a sculptured bar, before you’re
away for the whole wild turning year, dotting above the swell, separate and together
as Fingal’s pillars in the Hebridean surge, your syncopated polka
soaring con brio out to the jazz of the naked sea.
©Alison Leonard.
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Alison Leonard |
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| Alison Leonard has written fiction and drama for adults and children. She is a Quaker who also treads a goddess path. You can see more of Alison's work on her own website. | |