Poem: double sonnet for the Nene Ports
The river workers know the way to home
is always changing though it seems the same:
same Nene, same Wash, same marshland flocked with gulls,
same lighthouse twins at Sutton Bridge and seals
cat-napping at the muddy edge where sea
and river bodge a way of talking free
of hesitation—salt/fresh fluencies
of water meeting water. Here, beneath
a sky enough for painters, cormorants,
the RAF, the spin of windfarms and
the suddenness of squalls and shooting stars
the boatmen watch the current, check the draught,
adjust for deviations, compass swing,
and make for deeper water knowing
it still comes down to instinct—when to leap
the pilot boat and meet the other ship’s
long ladder rope, and when to rudder-nudge
into the basin, right place/right time, judge
the narrows and outwit the river’s wit
with horsesense borrowed from white horses out
at sea among the family of buoys
whose names speak loyalty—Mac, Big Tom, Eye—
eternally. If what becomes of us
in leaving is we’re loved or missed enough
to stick around as words, as these men were,
then languages, like tides, return us where
we can be useful, humanly alive
like voices calling over water: wave.