Monday, December 2, 2024

A Life's Story

 

Unlikely now: the size of your fist;

hard, smooth, rounded; chiselled by weather, abraded

in the billions of quartz, sandstone and granite stones

constantly rolling in the tide on this cold Atlantic shore.


Limestone. I, unlike them, sprung from life;

carry my ancestors within me; crinoids, brachiopods

and bryozoa; their shells, hard parts crystallized now;

I am an assemblage that collected on the bed of another sea;


a tropical sea that teemed with life and its colours.

How far away that bright life was from the lithification that comes,

but time, all too soon, brings its darkness

and I have spent millions of years deep in the inanimate earth.


That I would see light again seemed unlikely

and yet, here I am, carrying the vestiges of a sea that once was home.

As you pass over me, you will not notice;

but my voice is there, in the tumult of the waves shifting the stones.

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