Eric Zener |
Swimmer
I.
Observe how he negotiates his way
With trust and the least violence, making
The stranger friend, the enemy ally.
The depth that could destroy him gently supports him.
With water he defends himself from water.
Danger he leans on, rests in. The drowning sea
Is all he has between himself and drowning.
II.
What lover ever lay more mutually
With his beloved, his always-reaching arms
Stroking in smooth and powerful caresses?
Some drown in love as dark water, and some
By love are strongly held as the green sea
Now holds the swimmer. Indolently he turns
To float – the swimmer floats, the lover sleeps.
Robert Francis
The stranger friend,
the enemy ally”, what a marriage of opposites. “The drowning sea is all he has
between himself and drowning.” Every line brims with paradox. “The depth that
could destroy him gently supports him.” I shake my head over this. I mean –
swimming! How often have we thought through this thing we do? What dark magic
is at work here? And why does it take a poem to show us the unearthly strangeness
of an every day activity? It reminds me a little of death. Always with us, like
an element, always working against us, and yet also the thing awakening us to
life. Somehow, we need to swim within
this and allow the paradox to make us buoyant. "With trust and the least violence."
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