Last February I posted about the fifteen heron species I had seen. (I've also seen five kinds of egrets, which are technically also herons, but I'm sticking with the ones with heron in their name.) Over the break from school, I saw a new one, a sixteenth: the Goliath Heron! It's the largest of all heron species, and I saw it on a boat ride on the Nile.
Here's a Galway Kinnell poem about a different kind of heron we have here in Uganda. I took his last line and used it to start my own poem about our boat ride.
The Gray Heron
It held its head still
while its body and green
legs wobbled in wide arcs
from side to side.
Click here to read about the near-mystical experience that came next.
Possibilities
Could I change into something else?
I wonder
as we sail down the Nile
and our guide Moses explains what’s in front of us
in the last week of the year
I peer at other lives through my binoculars:
Multicolored flying flowers,
the Red-throated Bee-eaters
flit back and forth
A lone elephant
eats steadily,
as it must do up to 20 hours a day
to maintain its enormous size.
Raucous laughter from
Eastern Plantain-eaters.
suggest they’re just tickled with the whole wacky world.
Fish-Eagles
survey their territory
from the top of ancient trees
Black Crakes
rush busily
through the reeds
And there’s the Goliath Heron,
enormous and solitary,
fishing patiently in the river.
Could I be one of them?
New year, new me?
Could I exchange my worries for theirs?
Moses tells us calmly
how lucky we are to see all of these creatures
as we sail back to the shore
where we actually live.
©Ruth Bowen Hersey