Showing posts with label St. Lawrence River. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Lawrence River. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 May 2014

An abiding image ...

Eastertime 1962

That day in April
I left my grandparents’ house
and walked to the river,
the majestic St. Lawrence.

Beside it sheep grazed,
their paddock filled with yellow daffodils:
yellow beyond yellow,
green beyond green.

Willow trees arched over the low stone walls,

their branches veiled against the blue-sky sunshine:

I walked on to where a young boy was fishing.

As I watched, he hauled in his catch:
not the delicate silvery fish I was expecting
but a long, thin, black creature,
the embodiment of a hiss:
S-shaped and angry,
muscular, coiling, wrestling on the hook.

How could such a thing be in that water?

The sheep, oblivious to menace, kept their heads down.
But I kept watching that startled boy and his writhing fish.


© Lorna Harris
May 5, 2014


I wrote this poem as an informal assignment for the final Spiritual Direction intensive at Mt. Carmel. At the previous intensive last fall, Cathy Smith-Bowers asked each of us to choose a colour or have a colour choose us and, using it, find an abiding image as the basis for our poem. I struggled with yellow all winter as I did not feel at all yellow. Several days before we were due to be in Niagara Falls I wrote this. You would hardly guess that yellow was the colour, would you!

The poems of the other members of my group were really wonderful, and I venture to say, none of us considers ourself as a poet. But of course, somewhere inside, we all are.