(for Robin V. Robinson, photographer)
Water can be so tender,
As calm as a curious child
Looking in a mirror,
Or an old woman
Pondering the story of her life
As she looks through a window.
It can sprawl out as quiet
As a crocodile in the sun,
Be as still as a small pool
Immobilised by ice.
It can sleep in the dream
Of its transparent self.
Water can shiver along
In the shape of a snaking stream,
With its memories
Of losing itself in a river
That will lose itself
In the slow gulp of the ocean.
Water can be so powerful,
Thrashing the night body
Of a coastal landscape,
Crashing the genesis of its weight
On the black spine of a mountain,
Avalanching its anger
To the shaking corners of its night.
Water can be so weak, half hearted
In its being, and yet so strong
When it stirs the heavy terror
Of its flood-hauling fury.
Water can be so tender,
Like a raindrop clinging
To the clear face of glass,
Or a tear trembling
For a moment in an eye,
A full stop of grief,
A tiny globe containing
The ‘eternal note of sadness’.
Note: 'eternal note of sadness' is a phrase from Matthew Arnold's poem Dover Beach.
Peter Thabit Jones © 2022
Published in GARDEN OF CLOUDS/NEW AND SELECTED POEMS by Peter Thabit Jones, 2020