http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
As
regular readers know, I ‘do whimsical’ sometimes. I began writing this poem on
the cliffs at Scarborough in 2007, and then forgot about it, only to rediscover
it in an old notebook a year or so later. AS a child, I loved The Little Mermaid, a story by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen. I suspect I have never quite grown up as fairy tales and their allegorical significance continue to haunt my personal space... in the nicest possible way.
Did I hear a mermaid singing? Oh, probably not, but...
ODE TO A
MERMAID
I once hit a beach at the cliff edge of night,
not a
single star left shining,
my soul,
a Black Hole, no glimmer of light,
(even the
moon was in hiding)
I cried
out in terror. (Did no one hear me?)
The whole
world lay sleeping;
heavy
eyes stinging with spray from the sea,
I heard a
mermaid singing
Despairingly,
I scoured that awful darkness
till I
made out a shadowy figure
dancing
on the water like a pagan goddess
grieving
our past, present, future…
Listening
to the song she sung, of a history
in which
I, too, played a part,
it struck
a low, half-forgotten chord in me
not yet
(quite) played out
Louder, a
hymn to the world’s damaged souls
rang in
my ears, on my tongue,
calling
on its strengths, inspiring new goals,
(of
these, too, the mermaid sung)
She left
suddenly, as if frightened by the dawn,
its first
weepy light already clearing,
in whose
sight I’ll walk tall, never (quite) alone
for the
song of a mermaid singing
Copyright
R. N. Taber 2009
Photo: The Little Mermaid on a rock overlooking Copenhagen harbour as inspired by the famous fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen.
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