Is there a greater privilege 
than to breathe sea air?  And here, it’s like 
a front seat at  the greatest 
open-air theatre in the world:  
 
I’m sat here on my coat upon the rock 
which reappears each time the tide recedes 
leaving the sand so smooth as if 
the sea were demonstrating beautifully 
the relation between its ferocity and power,  
and innocence, perhaps forgiveness; there’s 
a little runnel of water around the rock 
where I sit, notebook and pencil, just as if 
this must be the very centre of poetry 
in the world;  
 
the notebook blank 
as I watch the long-haired dog 
taking its master for a walk; its poem 
is the ballet it makes, leaping, racing, panting,  
looking back, leaving its long hair 
patterning the sky a fraction after 
every leap; does it know  
the ballet is entitled, joy? If I say,  
poetry in motion, will you read it 
as if you never heard the phrase before?  
Racing towards me now, hurling reckless limbs,  
one sniff at me, but then there’s something else 
more interesting here in the sand to paw. 
 
Some long intoxicating sea-breath minutes now, of mind’s content 
to be and just to be; the page stays like the sand,  
innocent, as white as salt and white as surf;  
and I, the silent poem that nature has just written.
Michael Shepherd
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/0169-lines-in-the-sand/