Glass

The
desert marshals sand
in warfare.

Hustles it
dust driven
into the compressors of aircraft
whose engines eat
heat.

Fired,
the sand becomes
glass:
a blown heart holding hot
steel in
its hollow hands.

It breaks
the heart
sends daggers of
glass to burrow bright
back in sand:
desert.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Rust

Steels
wants to be iron oxide
I’m told by a scientist:
‘We dig it
up and beat it
into steel, but it doesn’t last.’

In
each shiny sheet
polished rod
kettle, can, car and
plane
train;

foundations of a
thousand
high-rises
sky-scraping, cloud-grazing

there is
a ruddy heart
that rusts
lusts to be itself again. To
corrode,
collapse, return to
iron
its flavour like blood
beating
under our feet.


* Sarah Hilary is an award winning writer whose fiction has appeared in a range of publications including Smokelong Quarterly and The Fish Anthology 2008. A column about the wartime experiences of her mother, who was a child internee of the Japanese, will be published in the Spring '09 edition of foto8 magazine.

www.sarah-crawl-space.blogspot.com