I never left my wave-worn town
near a Caribbean din of seagulls, gannets
and ghost-ships in the horizon.
I never left the azurest blue I've ever seen,
even the black and most dehumanised hours
were embathed in that serene blue
of Novalis flower.
I never left. I still watch from a wooden pier
the sun up and down
like a sudden daffodil in bloom
yellowing clouds, the lighthouse, my reveries,
even the rotten smell of dead cats
floating in the slick.
I never left the scent of fallen mangos
dreaming of dewdrops
the tender glance of mongrels
sulking along the shores
or lapping up pools of rain.
I never left that full moon like dancing
over the sea, over the white oleanders
to the rhythm of African drums.
The first kiss as sour as tamarind juice.
The first love as brief as the moth flight
I never left my wave-hugged town
nestled in the doldrums of a Caribbean isle
where a sea goddess, a stella maris
(the bluest I've ever seen)
still blows me gentle a breezy smile.
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