Caribbean silk

0 Comments

Tags:
  • Nature

    Caribbean silk

    Caribbean silk sheaths, shifts.
    Sinuous tendrils of seaweed weave-
    caress as I pause before
    the coral-ed gates to the purple grotto.
    Barracuda noses into sight: rapier guard
    to the inner sanctum.

    I hang,
    weightless, waiting
    until he relaxes and swims lazily away
    into the turquoise morning.

    Startling a puffer fish into full bloat
    I fish for my camera.
    Unworldly shafts of sun silver through coral crevices
    dappling mauve and magenta sea flowers,
    a kaleidoscope of butterfly fish turn iridescent
    as they move in unison, dancing to the music of the deep.

    There are tales of hidden treasure,
    of Spanish coins lost here some long ago day
    yet I muse of flying with golden mermen
    or riding a silvered porpoise charger.

    Clown fish screwdriver through anemone fingers,
    their orange and white sparkling
    and I drink it in greedy for more;
    my thirst not yet satisfied, my eyes dilating
    as I shift to avoid a jam of jelly stingers;
    reaching, searching, mezmerizing.

    Tide turns, ebbing the pull.
    I surface within the purpled grotto
    breathe salty tang, eye clinging crabs,
    note I must orchestrate my return.

    Laden with photographic treasures,
    with gleaned memories, I fin
    upward to grey-green cloud of hull
    watching as bubbles spiral into light
    then turn for one last look: Seahorse salutes
    my return to whence I came.

    Poem Comments

    (0)

    Please login or register

    You must be logged in or register a new account in order to
    leave comments/feedback and rate this poem.

    Login or Register

    A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. It finds the thought and the thought finds the words.

    Robert Frost (1875-1963) American Poet.

    fyndorian’s Poems (2)

    Title Comments
    Title Comments
    The Christmas Angel 0
    Caribbean silk 0