River-LifeMy river carries sunshine on its back, joy-rides rows of bubbles swirled up by counter-currents, forges a deep-set path.
Emerging from tunnelling the darkness under the bridge it narrows, brown, a swift-nosed mole burrowing between banks of cow-parsley and thyme, pushing past the ghosts of the also-rans who didn’t intend to stay long -
my brother is there in the shallows resisting the flow, balancing one-legged waving at me; now in swimming trunks dangling from a branch, see him dropping fast, a bundle of flesh and daring into the water below, friends whooping, waiting in turn, minnows touching at his toes -
and by the narrow tributary where we paddled my mother sits on the grass, spots a kingfisher flashing blue dragonfly skimming the stillness, looks to the rushes opposite where she stood with us one morning for a photograph.
Only I’m here now up to my knees, net in hand, water tickling my calves, casting about for caddis worms shifting in their twigs, scanning for floating maps of frogspawn, the occasional cautious newt. And the river noses on. The river referred to is the River Mole which rises near Horsham in Surrey and flows northwards to join the Thames near Hampton Court
|