An edited version of a poem I wrote in 2021 inspired by a Sorolla painting of wife and daughters lying in the grass.
As we lay there, our grass bodies within the sea
of meadow; sweep of wind carrying us along,
flowers of rye. We, the droning bumble bees
in buttercups, the chirruping finches, chomping
cattle; sudden dartings within briary hedgerows,
rustlings, commotions but hunters’ silences too
and only a vague consciousness of the faraway
cataracts of traffic.
How sumptuous the flow of light and warmth,
the sinuousness of our bodies in that current;
the colours of the field embroidered into our bodies.
We, agglomerations of the soil, but the criss-crossing
zeniths of nerve and muscle too:
at one with the swathes of breeze-blown beauty,
settled, nested into our finest belonging.
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