• Home
  • About
  • Header Caption
  • Header info.
  • Photo Gallery. Paul Goldfinger photography.
  • Rules

Blogfinger

A Digital Breeze from the Jersey Shore

Feeds:
Posts
Comments
« Ruding & Wood: An ongoing photo essay by Blogfinger
Did you know who was the Grand Marshall of the July 6 Ocean Grove parade? »

A Poem by Charles Pierre: “The Bell Buoy.” Sounds of the ocean revisited from 2015.

July 13, 2024 by Blogfinger

Hi Paul:

Greetings from Manhattan. There is a common aid to navigation — often used in coastal waters — that has always had a special meaning for me as a poet. Here is “The Bell Buoy,” a poem from my 2008 collection, Father of Water.

Best wishes,

Charles Pierre

Shivering Sand. Photogravure by Wylie. Undated

“Shivering Sand.”     Photogravure by Wylie. Undated. Click once  to see the bell buoy more clearly.  Reposted this poem from 2015 Blogfinger.net. ©

 

BELL BUOY

 

By Charles Pierre.

 

There is something singular in the rhythms

of the bell buoy, as it rings in the wake

of an unknown vessel already passing

on to its destination. The restless gestures

of this solitaire, anchored in the routine

of the sea, are a directing presence,

even in this hostile chopping,

metal on metal clanging from its heart,

clanging down the chain to the muddy anchor,

clanging out above the waves, creating

a point in the pointless sea, echoing out

to another, its clanging a song

of hope through these splintered waters,

a hard human song in an inhuman place,

something with a ringing truth to it

of who we are, something to sustain us,

wherever this imagined drifting leads.

 

 

Sounds:  bell buoy ringing; waves hitting boat:

https://blogfinger.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/18-bell-buoy-large-ocean-buoy_-metal-bell_-constant-ringing-waves-hitting-boat-some-light-shift-bells.mp3

 

 

Music on the water, from the film  The Sand Pebbles  (1966) with Steve McQueen.:

MATT MONROE

https://blogfinger.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/15-and-we-were-lovers-2.mp3
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print

Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Poems by Charles Pierre | Tagged Charles Pierre poet | 3 Comments

3 Responses

  1. on May 21, 2017 at 7:14 pm JW

    Such a beautiful poem, even more so when read out loud. Just rolls along, like the waves.


  2. on May 19, 2017 at 5:39 am Jay Jay

    Charles has a way of putting sentence’s together.


  3. on May 17, 2017 at 10:46 pm Blogfinger

    Having worked in a Borscht Belt hotel, a bell boy was someone who would take your bags to your room.

    But Charles’ poem elicits memories of bells clanging on buoys or on boats in a harbor, in a marina, or out to sea. I have a bell like that on my house in Ocean Grove. I like to ring it and imagine that there will be an answer from out in the ocean; but that answer never comes.

    And if you can couple that sound with the smell of the ocean, you experience an unmistakable memory of salt water, sea gulls barking, boats, and dreams of the sea.

    For some reason, the smell of the ocean is experienced only occasionally in OG. So, like in Madam Butterfly, you might have to wait awhile for the sea to deliver. —-Paul



Comments are closed.

  • Ocean Grove: a really cute small town at the Jersey Shore.

  • Recent comments

    Blogfinger on Meet Nancy and Seamus: new Gro…
    Blogfinger on “Little Gem.” A ne…
    Bill D on “Little Gem.” A ne…
    Blogfinger on The “Fabelmans.” S…
    Blogfinger on A fuss and a word salad erupt…
  • Recent Blogfinger posts:

    • Is it the Sopranos I see or only Asbury Park? A rare spring snowstorm greets Tony and friends. April 2, 2026
    • What am I? Chopped liver? How a Passover food became a one-liner. April 1, 2026
    • Modern OG history—7/28/2013. Ocean Grove fishing pier meets the water. April 1, 2026
    • Modern Ocean Grove history—2011: Giving advice. The OG Fishing Club March 31, 2026
    • Modern OG history—-Passover Ocean Grove 2011 March 31, 2026
  • But who’s counting?

    • 4,859,104 hits
  • Subscribe to Blog via Email

    Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 536 other subscribers

Powered by WordPress.com.

WPThemes.


Discover more from Blogfinger

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

 

Loading Comments...