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Sea Creatures


Article # : 16264 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 3 / 1989  1,157 Words
Author : John Gohorry

       For Breughel's Notebook
       
        They brought her in at about seven in the evening,
        the sun hanging low between Meindert and Oudskarpel
        and the Meerwater ringing with fish rising to feed;
       
        her long dark hair matted with kelp and sea kale
        had caught in their net webbing where mullet and bass
        still thrashed and foundered, but she lay motionless
       
        as the men reaches into her beauty with salty hands
        and guttural expression of wonder. Pieter Houyten,
        known for a connoisseur of good wine and fine women,
       
        finding that tapering fingers and exquisite manicure
        proved her a Frenchwoman, whispered his little French
        to her delicate drowned ear--Quy v's ez bele midons!
       
        --While poor Jan de Boek, their soft-headed handyman
        from Pompmolen, blubbered helplessly Ik verzoeke jou,
        geliefd' Margaretha, kom uit'n de water,
thinking her
       
        no doubt his beloved sister, vanished these dozen years.
        She still lay as if stunned, bobbing among other fish,
        until Rijk van der Weyden swept his steel-gutting knife
       
        in an abrupt arc, shearing the tar-sealed seine-knots;
        and then these men, knowing so much of fishes' recovery,
        watched in amazement as she shook into her new freedom,
       
        vanished at once into the complete privacy of the Meer.
        Thankful, they hauled the lesser catch back to
        Oudskarpel,
        sharing already the doubts that they knew would be theirs
       
        When they told for the third time how she had foundered
        in their nets, as they stood by, rubbing their eyes,
        pinching themselves, in the hope that it might be true.
       
       
        The True Story of Francisco de la Vega
       
        They came on him in their nets fishing out of Cadiz,
        his eye cold as a pike's and his body grown over
        with lampreys and barnacles, his green loins hissing
        seaweed and crusty with salt as they lowered him
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