Driftwood, by Sudeep Sen

Literature

for Derek Walcott & Sigrid Nama

At the end of this sentence, rain will begin.
— D.W., “Archipelagos,” Map of the New World

 1.

 Part of the bannister-railing is absent
in spite of its strong metal-rivet moorings.

 Termite-eaten, consumed by the sea,
I can see its woody skeleton float faraway

 among the surf, its salt-scarred coat
tossing and struggling to keep afloat

 against the waves’ incessant lashing.
There is music in its disappearance —

  a buoyant symphony,
note-strokes resurrecting life,

 a new story — history restored
by resilient fingers of a master artist.

 Wheelchair and weak legs
are inconsequential impediments —

 his mind sparking with electric edge,
whiplash wit at its most acerbic.

 There is generosity for family, friends —
those who are gone, and remain —

 and thirty new poems,
an intricate magic of ekphrastic love.

 2.

 In the front garden facing the same sea
with Pigeon Island on the horizon’s left,

 lies a cluster of wind-eroded oval rocks —
their shapes mimic a lost egret’s nest

 or a ballerina’s curved arch —
a stone-memorial for a close friend.

 3.

 The driftwood is now out of sight —
part of his house donated to the sea —

 in gratitude the sea sings
a raucous song,

 folded cumulonimbus clouds echo
in synchronicity — a soundscape

 absorbing his commandment:
At the end of this sentence, rain will begin.

Castries, St Lucia

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