Showing posts with label pinkfootedgeese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pinkfootedgeese. Show all posts
Saturday, 26 April 2014
Heidagaes
Eyes shut to the yellow-grey glow
above the icy, new-born land,
I feel the sea mist rise up from the South.
One tin hut below us
- the only sign of our print upon the land.
Fyll encircle the cliff, returning to colonial nests
in a cacophony of guttural cries;
ownership and instinct.
The rain has made the lichen seem brand new;
wet orange paint on old, decaying wood.
The smell of thyme fills the air
and I find arctic river beauty;
spongy and filled with light.
Stillness takes hold, delicately,
and words are lost to the North Atlantic breeze
that carries a perfect skein of Heidagaes
above this folkloric cliff.
Labels:
andyetthereissuchstillnessburieddeep,
atlanticocean,
birds,
cliffs,
folklore,
fulmars,
geese,
iceland,
lichen,
light,
pinkfootedgeese,
poem,
poetry,
rivers,
skein,
southiceland,
spring,
weedsandwildplaces,
wildflowers
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