Showing posts with label rowing Lake Nature water rain cormorant island sand sky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rowing Lake Nature water rain cormorant island sand sky. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

Poetry Blog No 166 Rowing on a Lake





ROWING ON A LAKE

Most of the verses here have four feet per line and each stanza follows the form idea of the "Chinese Sonnet- "The usual Chinese poem is four lines. The first line contains the initial phrase; the second line, the continuation of that phrase; the third line turns from this subject and begins a new one; and the fourth line brings the first three lines together. Quote from http://deoxy.org/koan/88
Though there are no rhymes there are sound patterns of assonance and alliteration in the lines. For example- Chill breezes ruffle restful waters (alliteration the r sound is also in breezes) or the assonance of "eye" vowel sounds in Brave white high-riding over grey.
The lake in question was Narrabeen Lake in Sydney many years ago.




ROWING ON A LAKE 

Chill breezes ruffle restful waters;
Thick clouds dissemble a dome above.
As we leave shore a lone gull cries,
Brave white high-riding over grey. 

Green ripples push against the prow.
Seen-thin in sinuous, far prayer for fish,
A cormorant gives grace unto
The comic bobbing of a buoy. 

With sudden multitudes of drops
Rain-mist greys distances and patters
Wide patternings of growing rings
Upon the surface of the lake. 

We row toward land and sheltering trees
And beach on dark-grained sand and trudge
Into the centre of the centre island
And gaze upon the black shape of a dredge. 

So seeing the heart of the lake invaded,
We shrug and turn back to return
And row across rain-bubbled waters
Back to the streets from which we came; 

Back to the buildings and the buses,
Back to the shops and highway noise.
Away, away, we leave but carry
In image living nature-

Sand, earth and water;
Lake and sky.