by Cordelia Hobbs
Bask in the sibilant
splendour of this sparkling gold stream
Indulge in its
effulgence
As it smirks and
swerves it’s way to the Solent
“Nothing gold can
stay”
for when the sun
sinks below the sea,
what's left is not
gleaming
the river is seething
waiting for sunrise
to invoke in it, again,
that sense of feeling
I wrote this poem in
response to a specific view that offers me a rare moment of tranquillity on my
painful commute. It stuns me every morning and evening and I am often lucky
enough to capture it during the turning of day, making it even more decadent.
Portcreek Junction is a railway bridge that runs over a body of water running
parallel to the A27 and the Havant bypass. If you are travelling along the
Southern Railway line to London Waterloo via Guildford as I do twice a day, you
cross the bridge, otherwise known as Portcreek Junction, just before arriving
at Hilsea station. I believe my bizarre attachment to this bridge and the view
it brings is founded upon two things. Firstly is the fact that the train
becomes silent, the wheels cease to click upon the rails and you discover a new
blissful silence rather than the monotonous rattle that turns into white noise
you had become immune to after 36 minutes of a commute. The second is the
misplacement of and unexpected breath-taking brutal beauty of it. As
picturesque and lovely as the area of Hilsea is, it’s not quite a Claude Monet.
The view itself is framed by Colas civil engineering works on one side of the
bridge and Hilsea station itself on the other. Portcreek Junction is stark,
unexpected and mesmeric and then gone in a flash of warm gold. It remains as
one of my fondest views and probably one of the most beautiful. It is worth
getting up for.
The poem as it stands
will always be, on a personal level, about Portcreek Junction, however it will
always be open to interpretation, as all artistic mediums are, and is more
thought that went into it. The idea of light giving the water life and that
without out it, a body of water is angry or often sad but mostly numb. It waits
all night for “a sense of feeling”, i.e. light on and through the water. This
can be applied in a more vast sense to us as people. Without a guiding light,
whatever that may be, we are left to trudge on slowly into the vast and
claustrophobic sea without ever revealing an effulgent potential or without
ever conceding to a warm and golden feeling of worth that can transform
someone's life into something hugely meaningful.
The quotation
“Nothing gold can stay” is a poem by American poet Robert Frost. Frost was
known to write about landscape and the power of beauty in nature, his poetry is
very effortlessly thoughtful and I like it a lot. Here it is:
Nature’s first green
is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
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