Kwame Dawes. Courtesy photo. For many of us who live in land locked states, an encounter with the tumult and power of the sea can be a bracing encounter with nature.
Here, in a poem I came across in a clever new anthology called Read Water, Annie Finch captures the humbling way that the sea asserts its forceful voice.
Edge, Atlantic, July By Annie Finch
I picked my way nearer along the shocking rock shelf, hoping the spray would rise up to meet me, myself.
Seagulls roared louder and closer than anything planned; I looked out to see and forgot I could still see the land.
Lost in a foaming green crawl, I grew smaller than me; shrunk in a tidepool, I heaved, and I wondered. The sea
grew like monuments for me. Each wave and its coloring shadow, bereft, wild and laden with wrack, spoke for me and had no
need of my words anymore. I was open and glad at last, grateful like seaweed and glad, since I had
no place on the rocks but a voice, and the voice was the sea’s: not my own. Just the sea’s.
Kwame Dawes. Courtesy photo. For many of us who live in land locked states, an encounter with the tumult and power of the sea can be a bracing encounter with nature.
Here, in a poem I came across in a clever new anthology called Read Water, Annie Finch captures the humbling way that the sea asserts its forceful voice.
Edge, Atlantic, July By Annie Finch
I picked my way nearer along the shocking rock shelf, hoping the spray would rise up to meet me, myself.
Seagulls roared louder and closer than anything planned; I looked out to see and forgot I could still see the land.
Lost in a foaming green crawl, I grew smaller than me; shrunk in a tidepool, I heaved, and I wondered. The sea
grew like monuments for me. Each wave and its coloring shadow, bereft, wild and laden with wrack, spoke for me and had no
need of my words anymore. I was open and glad at last, grateful like seaweed and glad, since I had
no place on the rocks but a voice, and the voice was the sea’s: not my own. Just the sea’s.