For my father, Frank Neil
An East Chop lifeguard from fifty years ago told me
How my father used to swim out beyond regulation
Boundaries and head north by northwest to a distant rock jetty.
He’d rise from the sea, she said, to walk up the bluffs
Toward home and I recall his Vineyard car
Packed full of swim fins, hand paddles, and sandy towels.
In my twenties, on visits home, I joined my parents
In the ritual of their daily morning swims, inching
Into chill water, then letting go, surrendering
To an underwater world where ordinary life receded.
I imagined swimming east toward the faraway
Shores of England or Spain, encouraged in this fantasy
By my steady, arm-over-arm crawl, the breasting of waves,
Water opening before me, closing behind me.
Now I wonder what thoughts propelled my father
On his longer swims along the rocky shoreline?
A classically trained singer who hated to audition,
Did he dream of a lost stage life, of unsung arias?
Or was he at one with an element so like his own nature,
Magnetic and volatile, that he swam like a god in the sea?

Comments
This poem took away my breath
Gretchen Sterling Wayland, MaThis poem took away my breath.
What a great tribute to your
Bill Sterling WaylandWhat a great tribute to your father. Powerful imagery leading to an inciteful message.
Wonderful! Swimming does
Steve GoodwinWonderful! Swimming does free something in us, in the swimmer and the beholder, and you capture that. Oh the mysteries of the deep!
What a beautiful and subtly
Barbara kassel West TisburyWhat a beautiful and subtly powerful poem. Appreciate even more as a fellow swimmer!
Beautiful imagery. Graceful
ANNE LUZZATTO TisburyBeautiful imagery. Graceful verse. Love this.
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