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@nataliefeddema |
Beach Glass
Mr. Calava rises at five
A.M., the first on the beach, but not
Because he's crazy about the sea.
He's crazy about beach glass. He has
Two thousand pieces
At the latest count.
An industry of idleness,
He's a connoisseur of broken glass.
Sucked candy bits as hard as lava,
The shards are no longer sharp and come
In every shape and every color -
The commonest are white and brown;
Harder to find are blue and green;
Amber is rare; yellow rarer;
And red the rarest of all. The sea
Is a glassblower who blasts to bits
Coca-Cola and Waterford,
Venetian as well as Baccarat,
And has carefully combed its five-and-ten
For anything made of glass. It isn't
Fussy. It knows that everything
Will be pared down in the end:
Milk of magnesia bottles honed
To sky-blue icy filaments,
And smoky cordial bottles from
Brazil - sunglasses of an eclipse.
Mr. Calava's kaleidoscopes
Are kept in apothecary jars,
As if the sea were a pharmacy
Of lozenges and doled them out
Without a prescription, especially
For Mr. Calava, who firmly believes
The best things in life are free.
But what the sea has relinquished it
Has relinquished only in part. You know
How childish it is in it's irony.
The jigsaw puzzle is here. But then
Its missing pieces are still in the sea.
Not all the king's horses and all the king's men
Could ever put it together again,
Though - chip by chip,
And bit by bit -
Rouault could make a King of it.
Howard Moss
from "Beach Glass and Other Poems" edited by Paul Malloy
Mr. Calava. Who is this Mr. Calava? What kind of person gets up at 5am. to search the beach for seaglass? I like how this poem jumbles different stories together. First there is this collector and his dedicated search, then the story of the rareness of each colour of glass, and the sea as an artist, a glassblower who doesn't care about the quality or origin of it's material because, and this is my favorite line, "It knows that everything will be pared down in the end." I love that. Think about that awhile. It's so true. What does it matter the quality of my possessions ? What matters in the end is what was useful to me, what I actually did something with, what I took and turned into something more. And then there's the story of the sea as a pharmacy - that gets me too. For myself, and I know I must speak for so many, the sea has so many medicinal benefits - how could I even name them all?! And then, the story of the puzzle pieces forever scattered - I don't know if I feel sad about that, or happy. Is Mr. Calava slowly gathering these puzzle pieces together again, or is he intent on putting them together in a new way? A new art from a scattered and broken original? What a thought. (Georges Rouault was a French artist whose painting "Old King" looks very much as if it could've been a mosaic of seaglass.) All these parts of stories jumbled together seem rather like the bits and chips of coloured seaglass collected in Mr. Calava's apothecary jars, don't they?