The Linnet's Wings | Page 68

WINTER ' FOURTEEN Meeting point by Nick Bowman Shingle and a red cliff. A falling away to surf, the dim surge of a perpetual clock. “My father loved this beach,” I say. You look over your shoulder as if to find him. I’d watch him fill his lungs wit h it, unfurling his back and shoulders with the long muscle of familiarity. He’d follow the current of people, cupping his ears to the stirring of dogs, cricket bats, the rattle of change in the tuppenny waterfalls. This was his beach disguise, the blown out salt edges of his childhood glimmering on golden afternoons. Eyes shut to the breeze he would circle with bragging gulls over high cliffs, rock pools, the salt and vinegar sea front. The Linnet's Wings Poetry, Winter 2014 You think of him too, guiding you across slippery rocks, plodging in the shallows. The same sea’s rhythm is in you. This beach is our convergence, where we face the same sun, see the same bright dresses flap tight to thighs like a tatter of flags. Here time drags our lives to a single point, along the furrows we plough fetching water for our moats. Our backdrop, a scatter of children, red limbed, in a wash of ozone and seaweed iodine.