All the grass is parched:
dry, yellowing, and thirsty.
It’s just this way now.
All the grass is parched:
dry, yellowing, and thirsty.
It’s just this way now.
Planes whistle low over the austere Victorian housefronts and gables of Dulwich, somewhere up in the thick grey cloud cover of a balmy Summer night.
I pass tall, square, three storey town houses. The ones which have kept their integrity as homes have well-kept paintwork; jam-packed bookshelves and stylish light fixtures visible through ground floor bay windows.
The ones which have been divvied up into flats are drabber, less preserved. Off-white net curtains guard the privacy of tenants in living rooms-cum bedrooms, the tenants who are summoned separately by the different bells lining the front door.
Among these homes are private flats that used to be public shopfronts; bouji gastro pubs that used to be east end boozers.