Curled a snake of a road uplifted on a bank of mud falling to a welter of mud glistening gleaming in the afternoon light
Underfoot on the rough road a green mossy water-**** alive out in the air waits to be swept over and again by the evening tide
II
Let me stand still from this relentless passaging looking attentive always investigating the possibilities of all the eye can see within a footstep’s distance an arm’s reach a hand’s touch
Let me stand still on this low **** wall between estuary water and a channel in the marsh One - a lively blue waved and winded every which way The other - a muddy brown rippling in one direction in slow procession
Let me stand still but turn slowly to mark the edges of the sky’s horizon turning clockwise from the north and return - a whole sky seen
Let me stand in wonder as flock and skein a sky-squadron of geese high-flying over head southward out of a pool of midday estuary light to disappear beyond the mainland shore
III
The boat keels over so the line of her below-water body reveals a womanly self that roundness that beamyness so rightly feminine and now holding to herself a heeling hull full-breasted sails taut in wind and water
IV
A drawing makes the ordinary important It is a text that forgetting words for once spells out the body's role in fashioning our creative thought
Its contours no longer mark the edge of what you’ve seen but what you might become - each mark a stepping stone to cross a subject as if a river and put it then - behind you
V
Soon to be sloed but wait a while . . . its lovely flowers must form first on this shrub we call Prunus Spinosa the Blackthorn
Flowering against the sky’s blue morning as if it were - a cloud of whiteness a masking of lacework spread on stiff branches
Yet here in the garden below this towered room in which I write the shrub has clothed the end of the garden’s marsh-facing wall above and across and on either side spreading to newly-cut grass falling on the pasture beyond holding itself purposefully against the prevailing wind
VI
Silvery in gun-metal greyness this evergreen edible shrub (the Sea Purslane) with mealy leaves and star-shaped flowers form a natural border twixt shoreline path and salt-sea strand
A hiding place for ***** its leaves hold fronds that take a reddish hue a delicate shade welcome-colouring in this marshness of mud and brown water
VII
How fitting are the words correctly scribed on the bench by the wall in the orchard next the pond on this fine sunny day Certainly ‘The time has come, ‘ the Walrus said, ‘To speak of many things: of shoes and ships and sealing wax - of cabbages and kings’.
Yes - this gentle morning blessed by softest breeze and shadow-playing light has formed a place of peace to summon thoughts that hold no sense except to scan so rightly for the writer’s pen the reader’s voice
Such random objects fuel imagination’s play this sunny day upon the bench beside the wall within the orchard next the pond
VIII
By dancing shadows on the wall a plaque records his gift: orchard - pond - and all within two garden walls a rough masonry variously gathered rich in colour mark and fissure
Four Italianate hives cylindrically domed precariously tiled set at ends and in between on fifty yards of facing walls - as cotes for doves perhaps? to coo and coo . . when shadows move and flicker on the wall to and fro to and fro
because he loved this island so - he wished his memories might live here and now
IX
Together on the sea wall she said look an owl on that fence over there Short-eared she said
and so silent (with surreptitious step) we advanced - it stirred and lifting its broad-winged body flowed into flight with slow strong strokes beating hard towards the sea
but changing its mind (and poising on the wind) returned to quarter the field below where we stood standing rapt by its silent purpose as it turned and tumbled to get a better view of whatever poor creature lay beneath its telescopic sight
X
Here to seek a stillness I don’t own but claim I do - so here and now in this quiet corner (my back to that rough-hewn wall fluid with its dance of shadows) I wait to hear to listen and to know . . .
Seated on this bench inscribed with Lewis Carol’s words there is an invitation made to take the time to talk of many things (if only to oneself) Insignificant actions Graceful words of love Admiration and respect for friends and simple pleasures - We are so blest in all such things . . . *believing always a greater Providence that (so to speak) waits ahead of us
Here are ten poems written over a weekend in the former home of Norman Angell on Northey Island in the Blackwater Estuary, UK. The island is 60 acres of pasture and salt marsh joined to the mainland by a tidal causeway. These poems are my ‘marks’, drawings made in words, taking something from two matchless spring days surrounded by water and good company. Text in italics is taken variously from John Berger and Marilynne Robinson. See http://www.alicefox.co.uk/?p=2862