Fife Coastal Walk
These poems were inspired by stages of the Fife Coastal Walk, undertaken in 1997 and 1998. They were later published in issues of Fife Lines.
1. Elie to St
Monans
The approval of seals
Today we’ll be sea-things;
you’ll be a seal and I’ll be
a different seal. We’ll
swerve and flash
through the kelp stipes,
trailing silver bubble-trains
from our flipper-tips.
What’s the seal-doing word?
Cavort - that’s it - seals cavort
like no other creatures.
Do sloths cavort?
No, sloths brummage in the branches,
with their moths.
Dromedaries lollop,
while elephants proceed.
Only we seals cavort,
having the grace and wit
to enjoy seal-ness,
the sea’s beanfeasts,
and its scope for frolic.
Above, in silhouette against the blue,
a shag whisks the waves to soft peaks,
thrashing feathers back into line.
Shoreward we hear
the fizzing rattle of pebbles
in the wave’s backwash.
Being seals we live only now,
where the word is made fish.
The past is a tablet of overwritten dreams,
and we cheerfully ignore
the abyssal darkness
where a fear-filled future upwells.
Colin Will
9 March, 1997
St Monans
2. St Monans to
Anstruther
Marigold
Bobbing
beside the moored scampi-boat
an
orange rubber glove floats finger-up;
a
hand raised from the deep, in greeting or despair.
The
sea moves it in a mermaid’s wave,
gently
rising, gently falling, turning,
but
always with the wrist hidden.
I’m
almost sure it’s empty,
but
the drowned have many tricks
to
teach an old sea-dog.
Perhaps
the strings that shift the fingers
stretch
far down to bone claws
clutching
at lost air. Perhaps.
Colin Will
25 March 1997
Anstruther
3. Anstruther
to Crail
The stone harmonium
Once
waves planed a cliff
from
ancient dunes,
then
joints were quarried, cracks caved
by
the sea’s suspended grit,
grinding
weaknesses between blocks,
stacks
cleft to the open sky.
As
the land rose,
freed
from the weight of winter,
the
stone ribs stood free,
one
pierced with a perfect port-hole
for
the wind’s whistle
to
blow grains to grow new dunes.
The
codes for lovers and haters
adorn
the platy walls of this alfresco gallery -
Lascaux
in language -
but
where bull or bison diagrammed for ritual,
now
shapes of hearts and body parts
promote
a baser magic.
It
won’t last. Weather will erase,
and
like the transient smoke we saw
from
the derelict cottage chimney,
and
then did not see,
the
rocks too are temporary
in
landscape’s timescales.
Colin Will
Caiplin Caves, near Crail
March 29, 1997
4. Crail to
Fife Ness
The physics of fishing
An eider arrows over the waves.
In the depths below the bobbing floats
Heisenberg’s lobsters may, or may not,
lurk in each weighted pot.
The uncertainty is resolved
when Schrödinger gaffs
the suspended line, reels in,
and curses every stolen bait
and empty creel,
in the manner of all Fife fishermen,
then plouters home through the swell
to poison his cat.
Colin Will
Fife Ness21/09/98
All poems Copyright © Colin Will, 1997, 1998, 2018