1 minute read
South Side of the Sky Mark Connors
South Side of the Sky
That’sme, to the far right of a hawthorn tree: a water hydrant silhouette, an impromptu selfportrait on a crumbling dry stone wall. The air is bristling for a kestrel; I can hear it on the wind. They never come when you expect them. A pigeon has to do. And it looks comfortable up here, pretending to be something it is not, another version of itself, yet no less it than if it fed from hands in City Square. It’s a matter of context. And this is one place to be thankful for your lot. I dread my steep descent back through wild woods: bloated sluices chortling, in sly anticipation of my inevitable downfall, via water or by dead drop from a rotting branch above. So I’ll stay up here a while, listen to the wind, waiting for a kestrel that will never come.
Advertisement
Mark Connors
35