Poem-a-Day April 6, 2015: Inward lush unpetaling purpose

Hi Friends,
I saw over 300 wild dolphins today, which is totally magical and poetic. So we’re featuring a dolphin poem-a-day —
 
Dolphins at Seven Weeks

Inward lush unpetaling purpose in pink blooms of sleep, and I no longer needed to be separate. I was living there then, at the edge of the sea. And my friends came to visit, trying for a baby, not sure how to read me on that island of dozy sunlight. And there it was: familiarity edged with fear, the way we’d feed each other sandwiches and wonder if we should have wanted something other. We walked the folded cliffs over conifer fronds and mud runneling rocks slick with dropped fruit and rotting camellias to pause at the first ridge. We looked through high pines at the blue moving tides, then his finger caught a snag in the water and another and we saw — glinting fins wheeling the sheen, thousands playing in pods coming closer like the souls slippering into our bodies, attached to matter as flippers angle into a ferrying strand. We too are a species, I realized. We too could know that as joy.


“Dolphins at Seven Weeks” by Rachel Jamison Webster appeared in the March 2013 issue of Poetry magazine.

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