| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| >> Static Item >> Poetry >> Experience >> ID #1161020 |
| |||||||||||||
|
I dream of dolphins on the evening before my arrival.
At the airport, in a van, Katho greeted me. Her voice was the first sound of a friend's familiar voice from far away. Ernesto, soaking the coast in hurricane season, was a sign that authorities blamed the torrential rain on chance and bad luck. I know it to be true that for many years, traveling time hit me, hit me like a long train. Now as the scattered 'pour' turned to sunny, flat, rich green landscapes, square plots of land, I felt elated. I was back again, in the Gulf stream waters, hugging William in sand, alert eyes awaiting our destination toward the deep, blue sea. It was a flight that sent me to Katho's potatoes, steaks & hot peppers, chilled water. I lingered out on the second-story porch, later gazing down to notice princess palm trees, a boat across the street in a driveway. Magical frogs in the middle of the front garden. Yellow lantana. Tree of life. Wild yam. Plumbago. Pink hibiscus. Mexican petunias: raging flowers and plants. One particular Tuesday we took a river boat tour up the Gulf waters, departing from the Dolphin Gift Store. A tour guide talked non-stop as my big binoculars scouted for all kinds of birds in the grassy marshes. I focused in on white egrets. Up in a dead, high tree, an eagle's nest, gracing the ominous sky proved our journey would be a warning for me. The world was changing at that very moment, even with it's wildlife. The boat stopped, and we were suddenly snapping photos of dolphins, lifting up to breathe in the air, surrounding our boat. I am getting older, and the glorious sun felt soothing in glorious weather country. There were other tours. Men deep-sea fished in Tarpon Springs. Rod, reel, bait, Florida fishing license included, keeping their catch. Dolphins' sleek bodies, whirl in my mind, on beautiful pink clouds, joyfully jumping in the sea. The first time I walked through the Sponge Docks, busy crowds streamed through to buy seashells and more seashells, glowing hats, pretty jewelry. A Greek cafe sold cappuccino and baklava. I took in an evening at Santorini's off of Athen's Street, a Greek Restaurant which cooked grouper fish. Then a tour of historical houses --a ride on a trolley, that went out through town and which whizzed past Christopher Still, the painter, who painted 10 foot murals and who even placed canvas in the Governor's Mansion. Ah! But, yes, the famous canvases of Tarpon Springs. Artists at Work. The Walls Of Tarpon Springs. Foropoulos, known for his vivid paintings of underwater marine life. Julian and Karin Mesa fashion glass creations, make tabletops, gifts and doors of intricate glass design. Mitchell Lee Kolbe, once living in the studio of a renowned painter in the city 1900's, George Inness' son, painting vistas of Florida (George Inness, a landscape painter who's famous Early Morning was history). Art On Display. Rattner at the Leepa-Rattner Museum of Art. A collection that included works by many of his friends. Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, George Renault, and author, Henry Miller. Off to the Olive Garden in Tampa with Aysha, Katho's lovely daughter. My friend. My confidant. There, having a Mediterranean shrimp scampi dinner, bread sticks, lifting a fork to a huge Italian salad bowl in the middle of the table for six. John, the Hungarian painter looked my way, appearing weary, gaunt and tall. His paintings must have been expressions of love while painted, I think. For things he knew, with strange shapes and form, impressionism, colorful and massive. I dream of dolphins that night, caught in the mist of sea salt. William drove across the "Little Shaddock Street", his blonde hair enmeshed in the sweet air blowing through our beings, steering the wheel with precision, his eyes distantly anxious for the seaside. He parked across the street from St. Nicholas Greek Cathedral, the Epiphany Diver Statue by Kolbe, stark and glowing bronze in the front courtyard of the church. I opened the huge wooden doors. Walked in, signed the register. Thought to kneel below a huge chandelier. I prayed with the signs of the saints, the divine glass, the holy Catholic Church at home, and finding God. I could not weep and I would not weep. I rejoiced. I was at the seaside. It was a miracle journey to a different planet. The grand sunsets appeared strangely with the vision of artists' blurred eyesight, as breathtaking as souvenirs like Socrates soaps in gift shops, revealed by friendship, three steps away from higher ground.
© Copyright 2006 Feather Duster (UN: secretvick at Writing.Com).
All rights reserved.
Feather Duster has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work. |