Followers

Sunday, January 1, 2023

Two Sea Poems

 
THE SEA

Down the road a short distance the sea is crashing breakers.
I hear the soft rhythmic roar telling of a distant menace.
We live close enough to the beach to feel the breeze and smell it.
On a hot night it cools the house like a ghostly visitor.
Dark beams exude the odor of sand, old wood a salt fragrance.
Fish and shrimp, squid and snails are the gifts of our brooding neighbor.
We toss them in garlic and soy sauce, shaking them inside the pan.
We serve them steaming, feasting until our stomachs smile.
But in the blackness I cannot be safe enough to call the ocean friend.
He harbors in his belly gigantic aliens and swallows sailors alive.
I hold a match to a kerosene lamp to illumine scroll columns and chairs.
I gaze at the flickering yellow flame, warming within myself.
No one can control this behemoth, this restless surging animal.
If only I could capture this water and leash it to a post.
 
 
The ocean is a desert…

The ocean is a desert:
No water to drink,
No trees to rest,
No animals to ride.

The gull that glides
Above the waves
Is the faraway condor
Surveying the sand;

They are in their element.
We find no home
In the sea any more than
We sleep in the clouds.
 
 
...no home in the sea...

3 comments:

  1. Public domain photo

    Photo link:

    https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ocean_surface.webp

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  2. Original publication credits:

    “The Sea,” Boston Poetry Magazine (September 4, 2014)

    “The ocean is a desert…,” Written River, Volume 2, Issue 5 (Winter 2014-15), page 37

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  3. Water has many meanings in literature, but the most common one is that it stands for life.

    We also have to distinguish between fresh water and salt water. Fresh water is life-giving, but salt water is not, except to sea creatures, which we are not. Salt water is associated with the ocean, which usually represents mystery, and sometimes, because of the dangers the ocean entails for us, death.

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete