‘Fusion, Hagley Park’ by Gregory Dally

The Midnight Sons
by Phyllis Green

Fusion, Hagley Park

The pair maintains a tradition: 
hands knitted. Happy enough
    to smile with lips
    that argue for capital punishment,
they execute zags beyond the croquet, 
zigging past hacky-sackers,
    copping a ricochet.
    Mānuka leaves call them over
into the shield of the penumbra. 
Just as the singer’s opener rips,
    the crackle of amps thrums death
    to all their theories. 
The guy’s summing-up fades out, a sigh,
on ‘electrocution.’ His thoughts will keep.
    The two nod almost in sync,
    leading strides to form a pendulum. 
Onlookers laugh. It isn’t the cut 
of identical vests that makes them;
    it’s the art they use in shuffling
    as one.
There’s a swing of limbs matched, the cadence 
in Levi’s that alludes to their maker’s surname.
    On cue to a zephyr, they keel together, melting
    a hug through each others’ static cling.


Gregory Dally has had poetry, fiction, scripts and other material published in various journals, including AntipodesMeanjinQuadrant and Spellbinder Quarterly.


Phyllis Green, from the USA, is an author, playwright, and artist. She also sang with a big band in the Gold Ballroom of the Hotel duPont in Delaware, USA.  Her art can be found at ArLiJo 123, Gulf Stream, Superpresent, Paper Dragon, Rathalla, Talking River, Cinematic Codes Review, Feral, Agapanthus Collective, The Ravens Perch, The Waiting Room, Havik, and other journals