Skip to main content

Blue Voyage IV

Written by
Posted in


an island of earth indistinguishable from the continental drift / split by slow sea currents 
turquoise shallows / translucent blues shimmering / sparkled glints
glimmering
light stardust touching over the seascapes churning / swelling / the peopled coast
backdrop of heights / cliffs of textured mountain stone / bold mineral
pigments
diagonal swirls of rock vertical latitudes of visible Eurasian plates / opposing itself
mega-rifts of warring earth clashing like the gods of our primal arboreal
fears
among the trees we built on stone / to pray / that they notice us in their
power
mightier we made them into symbols / for all that is seen / by an eye / hand or breath

on either side of the watery course that makes inlets / coves and bays shine
with our earthly greed the dark wet stone dies against weather-beaten walls
made by the involuntary exhales of Poseidon / blue god of the West
rushing into the coastal rock like the moving sea / the verdant greens
lone trees sprout to welcome worshippers of contemporary re-creation
us who sacrifice ourselves to the bodies of fish and vegetables

water itself on altars of wood cut and finished / floating and bobbing / over beatific depths
coastline to mainland / tall trunks thin / stand alone behind a beach of washed red sand
leafy tops adorning the horizon / where the mountains of Anatolia spring to
life
along the Aegean high / of orchards and vineyards / olives and grapes
dotted brown earth surrounded / forests to the tree line / trampled by
footsteps of Asia
down over Europe, fumbling / only to reach the seaside shade / taste fruits
of the West

play in the shadows of the white-winged gulls / the black crows who steer
through the air from shore to shore / focusing through into the clear coastal seas
lucid dreaming to the bottom / all for a starfish / an eel / a weed / a
sponge



Matt A Hanson is a poet from Massachusetts based in Istanbul. The first of his ten-poem series Blue Voyage appeared at dipity. This decad cycle is inspired by Azra Erhat, an early translator of classical Greek verse into modern Turkish. He archives his writings at FictiveMag.com