Thursday, January 5, 2012

The Sea




The Sea


The sense of smell, they say,
which I lost half my life ago,
is the most nostalgic sense of all.
I couldn’t smell a skunk
in a closet.  But we don’t
keep our skunks there, nor
skeletons as far as I know.                                          

One night when the pups barked
out back and, in my pajamas,
I went to investigate I saw
a plume of tail.  I towed the pups
out of reach, kenneled them
for the night.  What will
Nita say? when I get back

in bed, I wondered, if that
pole cat had already detonated
in the weeds.  It could be
a rude awakening.  But he
was a young skunk, like
the pups, neither knowing
what was expected of them yet.

When I read Banville’s
The Sea, with its olfactory
tour de force and its tugs
at memory, I hark back
to one morning I sat
on an Oahu shore, the trades
blew in against my face.                                             

The detritus was fresh and
pungent, like the plumeria lei
and the kiss from the girl who draped
it over my head at the airport
when we landed.  “Aloha,”
she said,  “Welcome to our Island,”
Paradise without any snakes.

And in the back of my mind
I can smell and still hear
the pounding of the sea.
                                                           

Donnell Hunter
   5 January 2012


                       

We have Temple in the morning, so again I am posting this one night early.

2 comments:

  1. In your personal experience with the sea you allude obliquely to Bainville's "The Sea." After talking to you last night, I've decided once again that I have indeed read more books than you and have read them better than most, but though you have read fewer, you have read them better--and always have. Any poem about the sea works for me because, I guess it's primal in our own ritual drama and in our veins and arteries, even if the sea flows more slowly now.

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  2. Old Son:

    I don't know that I've read them better, but with all the things you have read there may be a dilution factor.

    My sea life includes Oahu's north shore for two years with a walk almost every morning looking for glass balls and some paintings I did when I was first starting to paint in oils.

    Then there was the Gulf of Mexico for three years in Veracruz with many morning walks with Nita.

    Plus some summer workshops in Port Townsend where:


    I made a covenant with the sea:
    keep only one pebble a day.
    Our friendship could last that way
    forever. But today I carried three
    a mile before parting with the green.
    Gulls kept silent flying in and out
    our circle of fog. Light held tight.
    Freighters answered the lighthouse horn.
    After a long time the tide shifted
    back a step, and the amber agate lost
    its sheen. I took the red conglomerate--
    its taste of salt and smell of driftwood.
    Both the the sea and I today were hard to please,
    each wave breaking with a whisper, “Choose.”

    —Donnell Hunter

    "Pebbles,"

    published in Rio Grande Review and in my Honeybrook Press chapbook, Annals of Natural History, 1989

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