Poem 439
Written when I was nineteen and rather beautiful I think … a selkie is a seal woman of Celtic legend who marries a land man but will always be drawn back to her natural element … obviously that’s a metaphor common to all relationships in which there’s a pull in one partner to their original environment or to some kind of spiritual urge … actually now I think of it Joni Mitchell’s song Urge For Going (written when she wasn’t much more than twenty) deals with this same feeling even though I wasn’t aware of her song when I wrote this … without the selkie reference you might read this as ending in death (and I suppose that is one possibility) but for me it’s loss of another kind …
( Good rhythm and rhyming, I particularly like the fifth line of each stanza standing on its own but having the same rhyme throughout … not sure if this is an established rhyme scheme or one I invented … and the change in meaning of the repeated final line … )
The Selkie’s Husband
Restless this evening she rubs the cat against the grain of its long lithe body as it arches under the strain of her pale and nervous hands she clutched awake last night in a sweat with a cry of fear wouldn't answer to me just lay in the dark with a stare until her dreams fell away to sand she sleepwalks through the day in a garden of grass and flowers summer sweeps the fields where she sits and dreams for hours and hours whenever she can but always she looks to the east where the sun explodes from the sea and whenever she looks she sighs I know where she wants to be though still by me she stands I toss in sleep tonight and see her far from me walking a wind ridden beach beside a sullen sea with not a sign of land turning uneasily I reach but touch a space and wake glimpsing currents tangle hair about her face until my dreams fall away to sand