Plaster peeling from a wall.
In a sports shop window, I see a Frisbee and begin to think about the pleasure of throwing them, watching them in the air, and catching them. On my way home in Calvereley Ground, I see three boys throwing a Frisbee to one another. It is one of those Frisbees with a hole cut out of the centre so that it resembles a ring. If I had a Frisbee it would one of these. Though more difficult to control its direction of flight, this type of Frisbee has a life of its own. Throw it low and it soars up like a glider in a convection current. Throw to someone and he will reach up to catch it and will invariably misjudge its flight as it rise over his head as though it has a mind of its own.
In the pub this morning there is a bitter called Midsummer Madness. Going for a second one, I catch myself, making the sort of abbreviation that is common nowadays. "I pint of madness," I say.
In a sports shop window, I see a Frisbee and begin to think about the pleasure of throwing them, watching them in the air, and catching them. On my way home in Calvereley Ground, I see three boys throwing a Frisbee to one another. It is one of those Frisbees with a hole cut out of the centre so that it resembles a ring. If I had a Frisbee it would one of these. Though more difficult to control its direction of flight, this type of Frisbee has a life of its own. Throw it low and it soars up like a glider in a convection current. Throw to someone and he will reach up to catch it and will invariably misjudge its flight as it rise over his head as though it has a mind of its own.
In the pub this morning there is a bitter called Midsummer Madness. Going for a second one, I catch myself, making the sort of abbreviation that is common nowadays. "I pint of madness," I say.
1 comment:
There are days when I've one pint of madness too many.
That's funny, Joe.
Post a Comment