Issue 121, Winter 1991
The forest comes down at night. She waits until the
last tram has left, then sets off. She meets the
drunks—with eyes half-shut they pass through
her, they stumble but don’t curse. The forest
walks steadily on. Like children at recess the
houses scatter in twos and threes, tossing us,
slippered and pajama’d, into the branches. Where
are the streets? They’ve flowed away beneath the
leaves and moss. The telephone wires, the
whizzing of cars? Now they’re clogging only
dreams. And the shopfronts? They’ve gone
elsewhere in search of passersby.