Bordeaux Bay

Bordeaux Bay
Bordeaux Bay by Guernsey-based artist Tony Taylor

Sunday, 27 November 2022

THAT SINKING FEELING

This unrhyming poem, written nearly a decade ago, was inspired from a family story, probably mythical as many such tales are, but memorable and much repeated throughout the years.













INCIDENT AT LOUGHBRICKLAND 


A young man in a rowing boat,

oars raised, resting on still water,

casts overboard a single line

then settles back to let the sun

warm his pale face. His eyes reflect

an unflawed sky, grown more blue yet

as his boat bobs on a broad pond,

itself reflecting the awesome,

hungering, endlessness above.

At the broad pond’s edge, wild geese rise

in a rasp of noise, from tall reeds.

He turns his face to meet the sound,

that spreads outwards like a spillage,

and sees something, perhaps nothing,

rise then dip beneath the surface:

a fish perhaps, no, not a fish,

out there, where only fish should be,

a shapelessness, a shapeless shape.

He rubs his eyes; the sky goes dark,

then, when he opens them again,

sunlight, like a shower of needles,

makes him blink and he sees a shape

rear like a horse in the water,

its head and neck, black as bog-oak,

its watery mane like tendrils

of some obscure, aquatic plant.

It dives again and vanishes

as he sits spellbound, oars at rest,

dumfounded in the rocking boat,

the witching woods and shingle shore

so distant now. A shiver hits

the hull, something unnatural

disturbs the balance of the craft:

it sways and tips, his fishing rod

slips overboard; the sky and sun

suddenly tilt and what he hears

is the wild geese, their raucous din,

as water thunders round his head.

Cold, it fills his ears to bursting, 

stifles his cry, makes wild his hair.

His eyes stare into spreading green

as, down, he tumbles like a stone

into a net of water-weed,

that grips him, cleaves and interweaves,

and thus, ensures he never leaves.


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