Debris, all
over the strand,
driftwood after
a sea storm,
poured out
of the horizon’s frown,
our tossed
up losses, our mess from the unknown.
She enjoys jumping
in and out of this wood web,
sniffing salt
on rugged damp bark
while the
sea roar fills the picture
with its
wide open throat.
It could be
anything seen from above,
the tatters
of us all, the gristle of our souls,
many a Lear’s
new rages and regrets,
released
from dragonish clouds to make us strut and fret.
I gaze,
blow a thin whistle in her direction,
asking to
move forward, lose sight of her
for a
moment in this Guernica of wood,
then she
reappears, a long stick in her mouth on top
of a
mountain of sand, she is dangling it from side to side
as if it
were a trophy I am due to recognize.
All this,
like anything, could be a dream,
its sense
scattered and lost in what is seen.
Another
flash in the puzzle,
in the
scattering of our transit,
what we can
remember and forget, put in a life’s file,
what we can't
but accept, in the meanwhile.
2 comments:
I like the atmosphere in this,
the tatters of us all, the gristle of our souls,
many a Lear’s new rages and regrets,
Tremendous two lines. A couplet among many that stood out in a fine, atmospheric poem.
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