Ruthanne (Rufus) Collinson has worked as a journalist, photographer, bookkeeper and turkey farmer. Her poems have appeared in various journals for the field of experiential education. Two books of her poetry have been published by Folly Cove Books, Turning the Stones (1997) and Traveling to You (2008). Rufus was formerly the Manager of Communications for Project Adventure and lives in Gloucester.
Water Over Stones
This morning
the ravenous sea
reaches way out
over the shore
and pulls back again,
powerfully driven
to contain itself
and everything else too.
I hear the haul
of water
over a hundred thousand stones.
O the sound of longing,
hush rock hustle
huddle huddle hush,
the crockery and the surge,
water taking the shape
of stones,
this great symphonic jostling
of all that comes in,
of all that pulls out,
of all that remains.
On the Boulevard
On the first morning of my new life
on the weathered promenade
above the ancient harbor,
I see the swan
gliding in from another cove,
all curves and glory, magnificently
Single.
And then a silver sedan
pulls up from the city side,
rolls in over smooth stones,
and stops.
In a lurch of time and motion,
a woman emerges,
stooped and groping
calling over and over,
Sheenuu…Sheenuu…Sheenuu…
The swan looks in her direction
and paddles madly toward the pebbled shore.
The woman plods carefully in turn,
her arms clasped in front of her.
Sheenuu comes ashore,
as awkward now as composed before,
one slow ungainly step after another.
The woman stumbles a little,
crooning softly now,
There there,
reaching out the cup
of her clasped, primeval hands.
The swan slides her long neck
into the curve of arms.
And they embrace there
on my first morning in this new place
where anything is possible.
Truth
Sitting on the stoop,
third week in the city,
I see a teen-aged girl
and a young boy –
maybe her brother,
maybe her charge –
pass by.
In a small hollow of quiet
within the bass notes and the sirens,
I hear them clearly.
She is talking
with animation and confidence.
She says, “It’s only because
he cares about you so much.”
After a small silence,
the boy reaches out
and touches her elbow,
saying again and again,
“It’s true.
It’s true.
It’s true.”
How wonderful
to be in the presence
even for a moment
of this young soul
discovering
for the first time perhaps
what in this life
is True.
As you pass through
the seasons of yourself..
May you slip a little,
drift a little,
swim way out,
lose yourself occasionally
in the fragrance
and the fire,
be a little blown away,
be a little certain,
find the hearth that waits for you
in every kind of weather.