The warm Blue waters, hot Yellow sandy beaches, and Red sunburnt skin. Licence to Slay Poem and image by brulebilly | A Summer remembrance of a South Atlantic beach. And there was this beach ample to the four winds, Its sandhills almost covering the struggling bushes Whose branchtips merely emerging from the sands Flowered fiery yellow hopes of future seedlings, Wild species, wild loves, Tamarisk dark greens and acacia leathered leaves. And now there were also my dreams Drifting back to ages faraway in the past, When I used to run up and down and roll over my stomach To the pits where swirlings gathered all the human dirt And from there climb up to start all over again Under her summer-inspired eye... She was also very young, perhaps a year or two younger than me And looked patiently down, Her clear green eyes sadly fixed on my silly games, Juvenile breasts barely insinuating under a flimsy linen dress. Whilst I thought she was absolutely unaware That all that I was doing was for her, Along that long, warm month. Until one day she stood up and came, her hand took mine, Firm was her grip and, without saying a word, We went together to the bushes and unclothed behind The translucent sea foliage and kissed And hugged and rolled, and all... Seawaves, gulls' screams, gritting sands, The scents and noises and murmurs of the beach, And a blanket of wet hot breeze covering us. I don't know what she had in her mind Because the following day, And the next and the next and the next, She wasn't there. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Three-score is a lot of years, you know? But to me it seems just yesterday: Whenever I come to a beach, any beach, anywhere in the world, I see her and her clear green patient staring eyes, Looking sadly at me. © 2004 Salvador Oría
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| A summer day at Mudeford We gathered, tight together, as many times before , in the tiny beach hut, across the water , from Mudeford Quay. Picnic, wine, laughter, but this time to say goodbye. Her eyes still bright, hand feebly lifted , and a kiss from everyone, Sheila smiled. Mike took her tiny hand anticipating her wants, as the morning mists heralded a hot summer day. Mudeford Quay across the water sent us sounds of children, young life playing, as older life played out.. It was a day of last days. Memories were stored and held fast. Evening called and we drifted away Sheilas eyes were dimmer, Her smile was smaller. The next time we all met up We buried her.
The Orange Witch A Summer afternoon After carefully pruning the dead-head spent flowers from our beloved roses, I sit placidly to enjoy a scenty cup of Earl Grey, to search for a bit of inspiration on what will I do with the aphid population if the organic soap solution doesn't work. It's 6 p.m. I grab a sandwich from the trolley, Patsy has prepared a few for this ocassion: roastbeef, mayonnaise and nasturtium leaves picked from the garden minutes ago, with cucumber sprinkled with Worcester spicy sauce, between two generous brown bread slices. In a couple of hours we shall see the sun set behind a scaled curtain of variations of reds. The evening birds have started their wild chatting forecasting a magnificent following day. Oh, how I love these quiet afternoons of summer, I wish they'll never come to an end! © 2004 Salvador Oría
Seashore Serendipity
White crested waves race Building breathlessly 'Til releasing relief Upon the shattered shore Shingle scrunches under eager feet Squelchy seaweed squeaks Revealed by retreating tide Splish splosh splash Paddle at water's edge Discover seawater pools See shells, starfish and tiny crabs Marvel at marine miracles Overhead gulls raucous call Circling and swooping seawards Lick lips crusted with salt Smell onions and vinegar Burgers or fish 'n' chips Vendors beckon beneath cheery lights Illuminated thrills at distant funfair Excited screams travel far Competing with Nature's Ceaseless rippling roar © Christine L. Coles
One day in Skegness The sun was shining on a high when I first saw you by the pier In the crowd I lost you My heart was filled with fear I searched the beach all the way down to the sea I tried the promenade Though I knew not, where you could be The clock tower struck midday as I passed by its side So I climbed aboard the big wheel to see if I could see where you did hide But nothing seemed to help even the jolly fisherman could not assist My day was coming to an end and my eyes became clouded by a mist As I walked slowly to the station My heart was in a mess When I saw you and you came to me and I found my love one day in Skegness ... Stoned1Griff Summer Evening Slowly day ebbs to the edge, traffic's heavy drone retreats sunshine pulls out with the tide, evening stretches in the heat.
Old clans meet and gather round, share a feast in honoured way, smoke curls up to amber clouds, embers pattern memories. Fingers brush to lay the feast, linger over easy toil, sweet aromas waft around, tempt a palate dry with talk. Salads, salty, dressed with oil, plump tomatoes, fresh baked bread, mellow cheese on smokey lips red wine spreads a warm caress As the cool of darkness falls conversation fades away, sated, sleepy, friends depart, rich with moments of the day. Phoebe Seaside Ditty
I went down to the seaside Played Bingo on the Pier Looked at saucy Postcards Drank lots of lukewarm beer Staggered along the Promenade Fighting gale-force wind and rain Ate soggy chips and battered fish Supped lots more beer again I went into the fun-fair On all the thrilling rides Till I went green and queasy And threw up my insides So now the day is over And all my money spent I’ll try to think of a good excuse To explain my missing rent © Christine L. Coles Inisheer Above the half door, a beach, above that again, the sea. The morning ferry from Galway anchors in the doorway and waits offshore in the sun. Aran sweaters are navy blue and such, but never white. The men, tough as the sea, are readying their currachs, which are also fishing boats. This island has no police, no cars, no roads, no harbour. The people speak Irish and the tiny stonewalled fields have rabbits and a donkey or two. This eastern side faces the mainland. There's a pub. That's it. They close when you finish drinking. We never knew and kept them awake, then staggered out under the stars. One of them was zig-zagging. Who knew we couldn't fix it, on the rocky path we walked, stopping, sitting, starting again, mystified and drunk with life. I was remembering Howth head when three of us lay in the dark in an all-enveloping blackness, with constellations above and a boat light crossing the bay. That sober night you said "Who can look on this and fail to find wisdom?" I recall it was your wisdom that always saw us through. On another sandy beach, minute, sheltered by rocks, we sunbathed but never swam. The cove was full of jelly-fish blown in by last night's gale. I ate something like wild garlic stupidly, luckily not poisoned. Walking where kites swooped to threaten our heads, we found a ruin half-buried in the sand. It was a church from the age of saints and scholars, hungry, not tall or else they stooped to pass under the low lintel into their pious stone hall. Our blase plaster living rooms might be bigger now than this place where monks huddled and chanted in Latin, fearful, euphoric and awestruck. Another mile to the final cliffs where sheered walls of brown rock face the edge of the world. Did they venture in twos, singly, or all together to this western shore? They prayed to God of the Atlantic for their feeble, perilous lives. They prayed for the flat world, finite under a dome of sky, waiting for the terrible Judgement Day. Next stop America, we know now. But for them the ineluctible fury of the Atlantic was proof that they were small, very small, and so are we, the same. The wavelets become rollercoasters only halfway to the ferry, leaving. It's too late then to set the price when they ask. Whatever it is, we have to pay the currach men. Ossian summer sunset a sunset like none other... a cauldron of red light roiling in the West behind dark clouds and below a black flat skyshade . the darkness an emphasis of light . we are between a flat black ceiling and soft puffy dark grey cloudbanks just below . white, red and gold deny the dark and a flat hatted triple-thundered head boils up in sight. . heat! . repeat . heat! (from Walkabouts:1997...) brulebilly
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