In a mood, blind to the new day
Over a few days recently, David Loughrey took in the unparalleled beauty of the Dunedin he sees when he crests the hill at the intersection of Eglinton Rd, Neidpath Rd and Stafford St on the way to work. Today, he tries to understand the subtleties of the
Wednesday, recently
At Paisley Park, the sloping green the smart set have renamed from the far less interesting ‘‘Unity Park’’, the grass was soaked with a heavy dew and the air was almost too fresh.
The smart set have renamed the park after settlers who came from Paisley in Scotland, where the weaving industry was in recession, in 1840something.
But that is by the by.
At Paisley Park, the sun was low. It shone at a sharp angle over Otago Harbour, and pierced blurry corneas on a cut crystal Dunedin at 8.45am.
Everyone was coming to and the city was jerked into a slightly uncomfortable consciousness.
The sheer intensity of the light blackened greens and darkened blues and picked out rooftops in Waverley to flare with light.
It was morning.
It was time for work.
And the city was in a mood.
There was a blue sky, but as morning workers turned off Eglinton
Friday, recently
At Paisley Park, the sodden green the smart set have renamed from the horribly dull ‘‘Unity Park’’, the air was replaced with a sort of drenched, slatehued mixture of gas and rain.
It was hard to breathe.
It was 8.45am.
Everybody had woken in a lather, and rolled from their beds into the harbour, such was the level of moisture in relation to the level of oxygen.
It was so misty aeroplanes refused to land at the airport and birds had to walk to work, lest they flew headlong into a seagull.
The sparrows were out of sorts.
It was time for work.
And the city was in a mood.
Workers drove either too slow or too fast towards the corner of Eglinton Rd and Stafford St, and refused to turn on their lights to make themselves more visible.
They cursed their luck at having woken on a week day and being forced to attend work.
Monday, recently
At Paisley Park, the bare green the smart set have renamed from the truly awful ‘‘Unity Park’’, the roof was ripped with a choleric, vaporous mantle.
The clouds gathered and swirled and tried their best to block out a thin, cheap sort of sunlight.
It was hard to think.
It was 8.45am.
Everyone had woken feeling scattered and difficult, blinking in the harsh light that shot east from the Steamer Basin.
They had stumbled out of bed reeling slightly from the unholy subject matter of dreams that laid bare their secret shames and deepest desires in a silent, troubled reality. They shook off that socalled sleep. It was time for work.
And the city was in a mood.
It was neither really cold nor really warm, so it was exceedingly difficult to decide what to wear, where to wear it and how much to care.
Workers aggressively tailgated other vehicles as they drove towards the corner of Eglinton Rd and Stafford St.