Thursday, April 8, 2010

The old fisherman from Makara

On the stony shores of Makara
Across the jagged rocks
There lives an old sea farer
Retired from the docks

His batch is nestled on a hill
Looking out to sea
Strangled by the yellow gauze
Beside a cabbage tree

He’s been so long a Fisherman
The life was born to him
But now that he is older
He rests with weary limb

He couldn’t leave the ocean
Like he’s by his lover’s side
His heart beats with the waves
He exhales with the tide

A whiskey warms his insides
From the cold and lonely night
When the families have left the beach
And the birds have taken flight

On stormy nights the howling wind
Does make the awnings creek
The ocean crashes on the land
The hills so grey and bleak

But he wakes to watch the sunrise
Turn the sea to gold
He walks down to the waters edge
To see the day unfold

He wanders for a while
The sand between his toes
The salty smell of sea kelp
Whistles through his nose

He watches in the rock pools
As fish dart out of site
And up into the sky
As the ocean gulls take flight

He cuts a paua from the rock
With his little axe
And wanders home to brew some tea
Brushing through the flax

And as the sun sets in the south
He smokes a fish that he did catch
And takes a seat upon the porch
Of his little Makara batch


By Bronwyn Hume © 2007

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