Rivers

Singing The River Song But Now…

Getting the oar…
[Image by Ashok SP from tramptraveller.com]

On a round little boat

Rowing

I make circles on the river

Going

Catching nothing but matching the twinkling

Sound

That the river makes, singing

Aloud

The eternal song – fresh and fragrant –

Ever

And forever – the twirling dancing roar of the

River

Meets mountains, clouds, the slant sunlight and the gazy night

Alike,

Exploding in joy, splashing timelessness in the air and

Life

In every drop.


Rapturously it unfolds…
[Image by Alejandro Piñero Amerio from Pixabay]

On a round little boat

Rowing

I make circles on the river

Going

Watching rocks, trees, the playful wind and the dancing

Shadows

That fall on the river silently, attuned to its

Flow

Rapturously it unfolds, turning, twisting, shaping its

Way

Melody-like, harmoniously, day by

Day

By day, and this gargantuan movement appears

Unmoving

To those who fetch the tools to measure the

Unmeasurable

And pin it to the wall.


Trash meets the ocean.
[Image by Szabolcs Molnar from Pixabay]

The round little boat is NOW facing the riverine plastic trash monster

That has devoured the oar I used to beat it

Foolishly… like a fool fooling no one

And the river goes on to meet the ocean.


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Ancient Dusky Rivers

Coverage
The river… sketching its way ahead…
[Source – Pixabay]
The Negro Speaks of Rivers

by Langston Hughes

*

I’ve known rivers:

I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins.

My soul has grown deep like the rivers.

*

I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young.

I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep.

I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it.

I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans, and I’ve seen its muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset.

*

I’ve known rivers:

Ancient, dusky rivers.

My soul has grown deep like the rivers.


Rivers – streams, creeks, brooks or rivulets – love to flow; flowing towards a sea, lake, an ocean or another river, and at times also drying out. Rivers love to flow just like life.

Most of the earlier civilisations prospered when they settled around rivers, channelizing the same love when drinking its fresh water.

And when mankind sat in a circle around the fire and created stories – of the sun, the moon, the thunder and the wind – they fostered their imaginations and decided to pass on the love running in their blood to a lovely supreme one.

Different supreme ones took the centre stage at different places and myriad dramas unfolded that the rivers watched quietly, flowing, gushing with joy every moment.

Resisting neither the rocks nor filth, accepting the dead and plastic bottles alike, it continues to flow… for now.


Still like a mirror, moving like a reflection…
[Source – Pixabay]

Langston Hughes in his poem The Negro Speaks of Rivers connects the human soul with the world’s ancient rivers; the hands that cupped to drink water, the feet that crossed the river, whatever race it belonged to, felt the same damp calmness every single time they drank water and crossed the river.

Written during the early twentieth century when African Americans struggled to achieve equality and justice, Hughes, presenting a powerful historical perspective in this poem, emphasises the link between his ancestors, the ancient rivers and the rest of the human civilisation.

The Euphrates, often believed to be the birthplace of human civilisation, the Congo, powerful and mysterious, that saw the rise of many great African kingdoms, the magical Nile that carries with poise the secrets of the great Egyptian pyramids, the folklorist Mississippi that shared here the tales of Abraham Lincoln and American slavery – shows how rivers carry the past in its depth, carrying it always with love.

And the one who sees with love can sense the connection between rivers and souls, between them and us; we all started this journey together, the rivers are a testimony.


“I’ve known rivers:

Ancient, dusky rivers.

My soul has grown deep like the rivers.”

Experience and history, though often oppressive, have not extinguished but rather emboldened the development of a soul, the birth of an immortal self, the proud ‘I’ that now speaks to all who will listen.

Christopher C. De Santis

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