Beside the dirt-and-gravel road
recent rains have cut a little stream
into the settling contour of a swelling rise.
Here the slowing rivulet, calming now
(water, too, fears to fall, grabs frantically for purchase)
relaxes its desperate grip on loads of sediments.
A growing tongue of brown silt
extends in gaping compliance:
a doctor’s Aaah of release.
I watch this mudbar lengthen with the days
observe its grainy leading edge
folded down to touch the streambed.
How tempted I am to touch it,
to feel its soft surface, rub its fines
between fingers and thumb!
But I resist, deny myself that human urge
to touch, that endless hunger
of the web of tactile sense;
there is a beauty that persists only undisturbed,
a truth that can’t survive
the ravenous carnal greed.
The eyes alone can drink, unfeeling,
and clever ears may catch
the tiny music of water.
Comments
Michele McFadden
December 20, 2012
Permalink
Mudbar
Beautiful and powerful. Ah yes, we so want to possess. Better left to just be admired.