As through a child’s eyes
If cows are sewn from a patchwork hide,
and sheep they knit from wool,
and ducks are stuffed with eiderdown, then what about the moon?
The moon
is made from rich cream cheese,
it hangs
from a silken thread,
but it
rocks the earth and drives the seas deep down into its bed.
Where
sleeps the silent hermit crab in his stolen cell,
dining
on the bones of men who never ever tell,
what lies beyond this vail of tears where none but one returned, who gave his life for worthless men, the ransom of their souls.
How many
salty tears he shed to fill such a brackish sea,
though oceans roar with those bitter tears, he shed them all for thee.
They say
the gates of heaven are carved from a single pearl. So pure, so bright they
shine with light from his celestial throne.
He
beckons us to enter in, the gates are open wide, but few are those who pass
that way, the rest too full of pride.
Have you
read the stories from the octopus’s ink, of the violence of the crayfish twins
who terrorise the briny brink.
Beware
the gangs of loan sharks, who smile with hungry eyes
But
all the while are watching you and whispering their lies.
Or
the solitary lives of monkfish whose days are spent in prayer.
“Come
share my light of comfort” in the depths of deep despair
Come ride the spiny seahorse among the wild seagrass, or see the sea cows grazing, as they slowly amble past.
Barnacles
wink by moonlight as the tide retreats, and dash across the craggy rocks when
the seabirds sleep
The eyes
of a child are open and see such other worlds, but to us they are hidden, like
a flag tightly furled.
I long
to see through childlike eyes, as once I could clearly see, but time has made
us weary like flotsam on the sea.
No use talking
to me.
2 min 8 sec
Copyright Peter/Christopher Mathews
2011
















