Musseling
Through the causeway sluice
the sea pours with the tide.
In rubber thongs I brace
myself for cold and wade
into the shallows on
up-ended blue-black shells
of mussels. As I lean
over their draining pools
they're savoring the current
through parted beaks. Jammed tight,
barnacle-crusted, ancient
as time, half-calcified:
an underwater lea
endlessly spreading. In knots
of rock and fiber, they
remain immobile, bits
of armored flesh with habits
of plants. I've long been waiting
to pick these flowers, snippets
of sea life for a floating
basket.
But those who dine
on what the oceans yield
have learned a fine disdain.
And knowing that these wild
mussels are slight of flesh
I search the crowded beds
for prizes. In the crush
of shells and stones the odds
of great gain while the tide
permits are small—and yet
one hopes. And so I load
the basket weight by weight,
taking what vision, reach
and chance bring to my hand.
In this attentive crouch
I scavenge in no end
of plenty with the gong
of bell buoys in my ears.
I have been scavenging
in truth down all these years,
with worry at my back
waiting for the random
hand at last to pluck
me from the salty garden
where I've grown old and sipped
a fraction of the vast
surrounding sea.
So rapt
in sea dreams I'm possessed
by rhythms of waves and feel
in ebb and flow of blood
and air a tidal pull
and sunburn on my head.
There'll be no mussel trance.
I have imbibed the salt-
steeped revery more than once
and afterwards have dealt
with consequence. It's time
to leave these timeless pools
where, bent and intent, I've roamed
gathering onyx shells.
Finished with musseling,
I make my way to shore
and like a laggard day-
dreaming schoolboy, hearing
the bell and dimly aware,
head home the longer way.
Jan Schreiber
©
2001; originally printed in Edge City
Review.
Reprinted by
permission of the
author.
|