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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.poems
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!nntp.Stanford.EDU!jchien
- From: jchien@leland.Stanford.EDU (Jennifer Crystal Fang-Chien)
- Subject: The sandy shore -- jchien
- Message-ID: <1992Dec26.203101.25253@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- Sender: ?@leland.Stanford.EDU
- Organization: The Land of Flowers (Stanford U.)
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 92 20:31:01 GMT
- Lines: 58
-
-
-
- [Don's Christmas present inspired me to write this
- followup to my poem, "The cerulean ocean."
- It's in my .plan, so finger me if you'd like
- to read it.]
-
-
-
- The sandy shore
-
-
- It's lonely here, standing in shifting sand, the view
- across the horizon watery. Heat-wave illusions of sun tanned
- surfers and shapely, sunglassed bodies flicker across the beach.
- A bright summer's day, and even the seagulls seem golden.
- I start to stroll on the sands, always parallelling the
- shoreline, a lesson taught to me by psychologists, and
- the golden gods and goddess part, shimmering, flitting out
- of existence as if on a palsied t.v. channel. I feel the
- warmth of their bodies, walking by them. It's good to feel
- hot like baking bread, rising with life, instead of the
- cold serene ocean.
- Once or twice a mile, a sharp fragment penetrates my
- bare feet, whether a scalloped bit of shell, dried driftwood,
- washed-up jellyfish, or beer bottle. Usually it draws blood,
- a little drop or a small puddle. The sand doesn't mind, it
- thirstily drinks what fluids one has to offer. But the wound
- stings like a malicious needle, prickling over and over
- along the smooth length of the sole. Sand isn't likely to
- soothe it, so I look across the dunes to the white-topped waters.
- Shuffling along with one good foot and the toes of the hurt,
- I work myself to the wet shore. The descent takes longer than
- it used to when I was younger, when I stayed near the shore,
- splashing. I liked the wet chill, the breeze whipping
- my damp skin. Not anymore -- it takes a certain masochism
- to endure the cold for long.
- But with a touch of the soothing waters to my bare sole,
- and God! how I miss the salty embraces, the cold, the calm
- floating in deep sea. I dunk my foot in whole, but the new-found
- frigidity hustles me to the sandy shore. The time apart has
- tempered my nerves.
- For now, I've touched enough water to heal the wound. The
- bright sands are lonesome, deserted at times, but they offer
- a richer solace than a watery surcease. The hidden dangers, yes
- they will prickle, but the wounds will heal.
- And the cerulean ocean, yes it will allure, always tempting
- like a long-time lover.
-
-
-
-
- --jennifer crystal chien
-
-
- c/c welcome, as always
-
-
-