Where do we go from here?

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Beach Attitudes

Every day I get a poem in my email box, courtesy of The Writer's Almanac.  Sometimes they suit my mood, sometimes they make me smile, sometimes they break my heart.  Today, without inspiration for writing anything, and without time to research a post, I'm simply passing along a poem from a few days ago.  One that did all three of the things I mentioned above. 

Beach Attitudes,
  by Robert Dana

Blessed is the beach, survivor of tides.

And blessed the litter of crown conchs and pen shells, the dead
blue crab in all its electric raiment.

Blessed the nunneries of skimmers,
scuttering and rising, wheeling and falling and settling, ruffling
their red and black-and-white habits.

And blessed be the pacemakers and the peacemakers,

the slow striders, the arthritic joggers, scarred and bent under
their histories, for they're here at last by the sunlit sea.

Blessed Peoria and Manhattan, Ottawa and Green Bay, Pittsburgh,
Dresden.

And blessed their children.

And blessed the lovers for they shall have one perfect day.

Blessed be the dolphin out beyond the furthest buoy,
slaughtering the bright leapers,
for they shall have full bellies.

Blessed, too, the cormorant and the osprey and the pelican
for they are the cherubim and seraphim and archangel.

And blessed be the gull, open throated, screeching, scolding   
me to my face,

for he shall have his own place returned to him.
And the glossy lip of the long wave shall have the last kiss.

3 comments:

Robbie said...

Great poem! I think the last line is my favorite.

marigolds2 said...

Me too, Robbie. I love the image of "the glossy lip of the long wave."

Maryam Mathis said...

Stunning...breathtaking...with a sprinkling of humor. I like best, this: Blessed be the pacemakers and the peacemakers, the slow striders, the arthritic joggers, scarred and bent under their histories, for they're here at last by the sunlit sea.