Monday's poem

Yesterday on the Peninsula
- Ann Jacobson

I have come to taste the chocolate, the flag is flying.
Baby seals swim, wait for their mothers to return;
slave to the mother milk, slither on any bank.

But of course we are on Argos, dressed in coats
that don't fit, over coats that fit; wind whips
the best of any view under our hats to savour.

The land leans over the sea, throws its stone
sat dusk, flicks grey over blue & silver.
It's best to fish in the dark: saves the albatross.

The horizon grabs at the sun, steals moments,
takes down the notice, leaves a gap.
We are smiling at the snow in Dunedin.

• Ann Jacbson lives in Dunedin and has been writing poetry since 2001 after a friend encouraged her.

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