New Forest

Dec. 3rd, 2007 09:35 pm
Fence
This one might not be enchanted.
Slap Bottom
In the forest, there are tiny islands, each made of only one tree. They appear to be floating through the rivers, but their roots twist and cling tightly to the riverbed. Leafless branches sway in time with the ripples in the water and my hair begins to swirl across my face as I try to peer at their reflections.

[livejournal.com profile] gevurah and I imagine ghost trains trundling along the dismantled railway that we begin to walk the route of near to Slap Bottom and towards Sway. I sip rhubarb wine and wonder where my destination would be, if I was on that train.
--

Sunday, [livejournal.com profile] ephoscus and I visit an exhibition that "explores what it means to be human in today’s world", at the Bargate Gallery. We tiptoe around encyclopædias covered in white dust and projected video speckles and then stare at photos of Bournemouth beach that look like an alien landscape,

At Mayflower Park, we dangle our feet towards the seaweed, while watching the water twinkle at us, as if glitter has been daubed across it. Southampton's elusive "beach" is also in view: the tiny metre of sand, where a fisherman stands, and even that seems somehow magical in the bright sunshine.
Tree at Bolderwood
She feels dizzy if she looks up at the tree, because it seems so tall, with branches that reach deep into the sky. She photographs him photographing the tree: He's pressed against the bark, camera pointed up towards the very top of the tree where the sunlight glows. She tiptoes across the gnarled roots of another tree and imagines climbing up it, towards the sky that he gazes at.

There are other trees and occasional deer, but at sunset, there is Stonehenge. It is cold and the tourist attraction is closing, but still she wants the sky to change colour to vivid shades of anything but grey.

After that, on unrelated days, there are rhubarb milkshakes and yellow feathers and illusions and hopscotch and the moon acting oddly again. There are no interrobangs in Morse code though, she found.

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