Sea Fireflies of Mindoro

Sea Fireflies of Mindoro

for Veronica


That was the last time

We laughed like children.

Water warm as the tropical air,


It was impossible

To grow cold and wish to leave

That darkening, calm beach.


We took moments to see

The water held

No mere reflection

Of the silent bursting of stars.


Points of light gathered

Round our limbs.

Wave a hand and they grew more

Luminous. We were surrounded.


Stilled. Galaxies

Unfurled with the gentlest

Sway and curl

Of our fingertips.


Beating lights traced our skin

That would never again be this

Close to constellations,

This warm.


-o-


Veronica is a very good friend whom I've known for many years. We call her Barok – the name of a character from a comic book back home – or Veroche (yes, it sounds like that other word for a type of bug) which the late Fr. James O'Brien did not approve of (perhaps jokingly? I'll never know). She has worked with various tribes and sectors of Philppine society that do not often grace the headlines.


This poem tries to recapture a time when we were young. We were among a group of friends who shared the legacy of Fr. O'B's Tulong-Dunong Scholarship Program. We had graduated from various universities by that time, and decided to go on a group holiday. I can't remember how many we were who went on this particular trip to Mindoro's coast, those beaches that are hopefully still as enchanting, though not entirely free of danger: tsunami, earthquake, poisonous sea snakes, to name a few.


It is Barok's birthday today. Maligayang Kaarawan, mabuting kaibigan!


This poem was first published in UNDER THE STORM: An Anthology of  Contemporary Philippine Poetry (Manila 2011). I hope to see this in a new collection tentatively called The Sound Before Water.



Filed under: Asia, Creatures, environment, Fragments and Moments, Influences, Life in a different world, Literary News & Articles, Mga Tula / Poetry, poetry, Silly Babble Tagged: Barok, Jim Pascual Agustin, poetry, The Sound Before Water, Veroch, Veronia Basilla Tarabi
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 20, 2012 22:49
No comments have been added yet.