The way the ferns are marching from
one side of someone’s garden
over generations
The cracks appearing in our smoothest
planes: plaster board, cement,
the skin around the eyes
The indeterminate vowel sounds of
static: dry leaves,
distant conversations
The clouded air we breathe within
the city’s mirrored wadis,
acrid, dry, sharp
The rippling sound of cars
accelerating to a pointless
stasis, disappearing
The woman in the cafe mouthing
cake and reading from a grammar,
conjugating food
The weakly sun, product of a weary
set of loins, a lost remark,
a treachery, a trick
The children smoking breath and
cigarettes and begging from
the hip hop station steps
The chicken net we stretch across the sky:
the tram lines and their rigging wires;
the last jet’s vapour trails
The way the ferns are marching from
one side of someone’s garden
over generations