Wolf Fish
By Philip Sidney
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Behind the seal museum
between wall and sea
on the rough shale margins
lay a heap of broken things.
A dented car, windows smashed, resting on wooden pallets
like an exhibit from the gallery of modern art
gleaming dragonfly green-blue
in the chill sunshine.
Pieces of faded orange rope
tangled with wire, nylon, fishing line.
Rusted chains, coiled like sea eels.
All had a certain unnatural beauty
too synthetic to create the miasma
which hung over this found art.
Wolf fish, or what was left of them,
hung from twine, nailed to a wall.
Their fleshless spines dangled limply
ragged tails held a dim memory
of self-propulsion, fluid strength through
dark currents, fading as they flapped
in the gusting air.
Their heads were still impressive
powerful jaws and teeth
that might crush a rock
had they life to will it.
Human-like molars
seemed to smile
in the brittle light.
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Comments
I liked this, a very visual
I liked this, a very visual scene I thought
There is a beauty in flotsam and jettsion that's to found on our beaches,but also a blight if left to drift off elsewhere.
I collect bits and pieces, but that's another story.
Regards
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Enjoyed this a lot Philip.
Enjoyed this a lot Philip. The image of once predatory fish hanging amongst orange rope, rusting chains, and the detrius of a faded seaside town is a powerful one. (Line 15: Should this be "Wolf fish, or what was left of them..." ?)
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Enjoyed the musings on the
Enjoyed the musings on the scene. Is this from Iceland again? Rhiannon
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Loved this, Philip, so very
Loved this, Philip, so very atmospheric, and I love 'junk' too. Have just spent the afternoon clearing out an old barn, and although I'm tired, I feel good because although I found much to skip, I also rediscovered some little gems, including two hula hoops belonged to my kids. Couldn't bear to part with them, so they're hanging on the wall in there now...a reminder of happy, bygone days.
Wonderful writing, Philip, as ever.
Tina
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You could make an exhibition
You could make an exhibition of these, Philip. Your Iceland set is outstanding. Have you considered submitting to Mslexia Pamphlet Comp this year? If you collate them, polish them up, you'd make the summer submission date. Just a thought.
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Hi Helen
Hi Helen
I agree, your collection from Iceland is exceptional, and well worth sharing in a broader sense.
This is a lovely poem - setting out the scene just as it was, and how you reacted to it.
Jean
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Brilliant Poem
I like the coupled words, "chill sunshine" which does not really feel like an oxymoron. The poem feels very modern, all the things that are left, broken, and ignored.
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Really enjoyed reading this
Really enjoyed reading this PS, creates a beautiful scene of hidden, broken things- the things that make life interesting! :)
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