Botany
Botany Sarah Holland-Batt After the rain, we went out in pairs to hunt the caps that budded at night: wet handfuls of waxtips and widows, lawyer's wigs, a double-ringed yellow. We shook them out onto gridded sheets, the girls more careful than the boys, pencilled notes on their size and shape, then levelled a wood-press over their heads. Overnight, they dropped scatter patterns in dot-and-dash, spindles and asterisks that stained the page with smoky rings, blush and blot, coal-dust blooms. In that slow black snow of spores I saw a woodcut winter cart and horse careen off course, the dull crash of iron and ash, wheels unravelling. All day, a smell of loam hung overhead. We bent like clairvoyants at our desks trying to divine the message left in all those little deaths, the dark, childless stars. |