Echoing Canto of the Gleaners (Six Circle)

Galahs and corellas comb the paddocks

after harvest. They concentrate

around field bins, pick at liminal

edges of chaff piles. Here, they scratch

away at mountainsides of air and fibre,

a second winnowing. Collapses aren’t rockfalls

or mudslides, avalanches or shifting sands.

What shifts is outside the Euclidean—shapes

shift and separate, some sliding down

around the ankles of birds, some shapes extravasating

into the air and floating out. Beaks and tongues

separate from soul, from body,

what hasn’t been re-winnowed and dispersed. Fanning

out, gleaning elsewhere in the stubble, galahs

and corellas protract windrows: they

don’t walk paths laid out for harvest, picking

wherever chaos has showered grain, gleaning

against the system, which would pick every ear

clean if it were perfected.