what’s happened — it duplicates, and we see it this time
Sacred kingfisher perches on the verandah rail, tracking insects
which double-image against glass and it strikes its rival, its own time
From inside the half-light of house we are part of the reflection
but, standing back, not part of a transparency, slightly out of its time
Its time. Subject object, insect. But kingfisher detects us just before
being swooped by a jiddy jiddy, turning to face origins, beak agape
Subject-object, angles of flight. Insects high-lit against polarised glass
now transparent with shifted perspective, and other birds doubled in time:
rufous whistler’s warning call, yellow-rumped thornbills hopping
sudden over low scaffolds of dry grass; morning of insects and kingfisher time.