
23
… gulls on the wharf-side roof
fishing boats
returning to port
white wakes trailing,
pointing to where they’ve been
where have I been
all my life
where is the wake
that tracked me to and from
so many unimportant places
so often have I waited
for that moment of reunion
port station airport
birds leaving nest
only to return
then leave again
are not more faithful
sweet brevity of life
a stone memorial
on the harbour wall
raised to all
who went to sea
and never returned
dying in the waves’ embrace …
24
… a watery grave
no church no candles
just cold waters sliding shut
as down to the depths they go
sinking from level to level
never to rise again
not till seas run dry
burnt up by the sun’s candle
even then they’ll walk no more
with their beloveds
hand in hand
on diminishing land
or sea-licked sand …
Commentary:
“Birds leaving nest, only to return, then leave again, are not more faithful.” A lovely photo, from Avila, of storks, bouncing on their nests, waiting for the wind to lift them up aloft. I thought of using sea side photo from PEI, but this image caught my eye, and my words. A verbal – visual link. Not easy to spot, but there, in the sky above them, a parent waits. As soon as one chick takes flight, the watching parent will drop, fly under the fledgling’s wings, and tutor the young bird in the art of soaring and flying. I have spent many a happy hour, just sitting there, watching them.
And here’s the photo from PEI. An osprey, returning to the nest, after a fishing expedition. One hopes for such moments. Then, suddenly, one day, the magic happens, and verbal and visual joining hands in a single moment of magic. And listen to that baby bird, beak open, shrieking, waiting for the parent to arrive. I can still hear the screeching, although we are in the age of silent, but colorful, pictures.

In the picture below, the Grande Réunion – you can see the White Geese gathered at Bic. They return every year, so beautiful. The first time I saw them, I thought they were a drift of late snow. Then they rose from the field, and flew up, into the air. I have often seen snow falling but that was the first time I saw snow actually rising, after it had settled. A memorable moment.

Moments of magic, as I said, and each of them linked – verbal to visual. Silent dialogs with my time and my place, now shared with whoever has ears to hear and eyes to see and an imagination to reconstruct the alternate realities.