Echoes

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By Katharine Macfarlane

In their excitement,

the children have forgotten the acoustics of this place.

Voices raised, I hear, and over again

“Seall. Seall.”

Echoes peel back the years. Gille-brìghde

rolls forever and over,

endless calling: bi glic into waves,

a catch away from tears as the sea

breathes into foam.

There is a space between rocks

where a softness of sunlight settles,

coaxes thought,

sends forth a berried crab, heavy with new life.

She slides sideways from the softened kelp,

like secrets that spill across pillows in the night,

and pauses, eyes skyward, before returning to the dark.

“Seall. Seall.”

I sink deeper in my own crevasse,

willingly shrinking horizons to a gorge of lichen-starred rock,

a sliver of whitened sky.

Beyond this fissure is water, and rock, and sand —

but these are not choices.

Or, if they are, they are choices beyond our reach.

I remember best “bi glic”, not least-worst:

when sand was soft, rock stood firm.

“Seall. Seall.”

For a second longer I stare

at the unknowing sky.

“Seall. Seall.”

There is gladness yet

that in this shifting world,

this era of insecurity,

where land is sometimes sea

and water-filled rock is sky reflected

that even here,

these voices find wonder.

There is gladness yet.

I pull myself from the abyss

as the earth replies to the children…

“Seall, bi glic.”

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