The Sea Cave
I am two weeks off a prairie sky.
Reluctant islander, what I don’t know of
spring and neap, urchin barrens
denuded of green. How you laugh
at my bafflement, night-swimming the bay,
spooned in phosphorescence.
Your casual negotiation of
basalt’s black tongue, limbs of beaches
kelp-sleek, slattern with sea.
At dusk, you show me
gifts stolen from the shore: moon snails,
bottle glass in submerged shades. The slick
dark mouth of the sea cave footing the jetty.
and noon, how I scream when
you ride the waves against that shelf,
the sea cave gathering you in. No hollow
in my knowing for the boom of tide
like pulse in such a space.
and you emerge like Sedna on
an outrider wave, as though
the earth’s heart is known to you, is
quiescent as grassland, easily shed
as salt brushed
from drying skin.
~ Jenna Butler
Jenna Butler is a poet and educator who makes her home in Edmonton, where she is the founding editor of Rubicon Press. Her work has garnered a number of awards, including CBC’s Alberta Anthology, and has been widely published in journals, anthologies and literary magazines in Canada and abroad. Butler is the author of three short collections. Her latest book is forthcoming from NeWest Press in 2010.
“‘What We Can’t Let Go’: The more time I spend on our small northern farm, the more I am aware of the remnants around me. Clapboard weathering down into grass. Pipe and glass shards, old hay rakes, shattered china and rotten horse tack. I wonder about these leftovers of what once constituted home for somebody else, in a vastly different time, and how simply the prairie has reclaimed them. I wonder about the mark my generation is leaving on this planet – wonder what I can do in my own small way to reduce it, find myself wishing it were as simple a mark as a river stone foundation settling back against the earth.”
Read more of Jenna Butler’s poetry:
– Wild Onions
– winter highway
– Farmhouse, Castor
– I-nis’kim
– Reunion
Editor’s note: This poem is from Home and Away – a sequel to the bestselling Writing the Land (2007). Look for one poet to be featured each day as Alberta poets ponder the question “what is home?†and explore our complex relationship with working on, living with, exploiting and protecting our land and our home. For more information about the project, click here.
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