This poem was written from an apartment in Hunter St, Hobart, where the author was living while her home, recently destroyed by a catastrophic fire, was being rebuilt.
Everywhere I look
it is a lesson in geometry:
triangles of all sizes
rectangular windows
naked, curtained or blinded
round silos now luxurious apartments
spheres on cruisers like diving bells
from a Tintin cartoon book
busy cranes rising to infinity.
It is a lesson in movement:
clouds rush, hesitate and shrivel
gulls soar, drift and plunge
metal butterfly wings in chimneys
flap in the wind and with the sun
play shadows and lights
yachts bob up and down
to the rhythm of the day
tree branches sway.
It is a lesson in autumnal colours.
Reds, browns, blues and greens
from the same painter’s palette
but never quite alike
change with the light.
It is a lesson in textures: roofs
blistered, flaky and corrugated
grooved, ribbed and ironed
glass, smooth and slippery.
From my balcony
everywhere I look
I see a complex design
a man-nature partnership
of ephemeral beauty
that must be observed
celebrated and seized.
Christiane Conesa-Bostock was born in Lyon, France, and came to Australia in the early 1970s. She taught French, English and Spanish at Rosny College. She has written short stories and poems that have been published in Australia, Algeria, France and the US. Her latest publication is a bilingual book of poems about the painter Monet (Kol Sason Press).