"The thud, thud of a horse's hoof does not alarm fish."
MIND UNDER WATER - 1883 Richard Jefferies
Fishes flee him.
They can feel his thoughts touch them.
Here, Creux Harbour on the Island of Sark.
Mummy fish tries not to laugh as her little darlings dart...
It's only a poet!" she tells her younglings
"thinking thoughts they won't hurt you.
Julian's vibrations pass through them.
"It's what poets do before they turn the world into words"
The little fish listen with open mouths.
"As far as I can tell...it's a Julian one of the cleverest kind one can find
a man composed of equal parts wit and charm
an all shall be well and all shall be well type of guy."
Julian is thinking of nothing
but horses. Horses.
The fish don't even get a look in.
He sees the great shires being swum in the harbour.
Such a magnificence of being
decanted from land to sea
the great hooves treading water
free to be themselves enjoying their day at the sea's side.
Julian is alive with this image
the sheer awe of it all.
The fishes think nothing of it.
They are used to horses galloping among them.
It's the vibrations of the poet's thoughts
that tickles them.
"But our Mam..?"" a small fry ventures
"...there are no horses here....and now?"
"Ahhh that doesn't bother poets ya see...they see
both what is there and not there or what may be!"
She quotes the great 16th century fish "Nothing is so but thinking make it so!"
Later, at the Candie Gardens on another island altogether
Julian sits, sips... a double espresso.
And again. A double espresso..
We see the words flow onto the page
charged with the grandeur of the great shires
as the little fishes look on amused at the poet's
coffee coloured thoughts.
**
We left Julian Stannard at the table as we went to pursue the museum that awaited us inside. I jokingly commanded Julien to use the time to write a poem. And when we came back to him...indeed he had. A great poem about writing with the sun and horses swimming in the bay at Sark. One felt humbled by his ability and the ease with which over a double expresso he could write so brilliantly. I was hoping that some of that ease would rub off on me but alas no.
I was like a little raft watching an ocean liner pass by in the night.
All hail the Julian who shall be 'the poet' for ever hereafter.