A bellow comes from the distance. I can’t make it out, a slow beat no end, humming, now drowning out the cackle of crows I walk with singing for a dinner by death. The birds of blood hold their hover running rings around rings, something has pinned the sun still, to a point hanging from a spot it can’t break. Our boots find wet woodland that by day is joy, by night that grows to be void of love or any other shade than mud, no escape was, is, here. But a man alone throws bread to a corner of the river where a swan white as fire, guides for a feast and fill away from the cracks that; echo between the plump bushes, from snaps that whip from hills, holly silenced like a child’s call for food falling unanswered … as the moon hoists up to begin the coming night