LOW TIDE IN LAGUNA DE BAY
They embrace each other again,
skin to skin, the islets of water spinach
and the surface of sticky mud
after a week of dancing with the waves.
The elusive seagull is close by,
roaming in the transient seashore
created by the low tide.
The islands of water lilies aboard
in the breakwater, lonely
for not receiving a warm welcome.
The sun is weaving, the twilight
says “Hello”, and in the distance
here comes the blinking of artificial stars
created by the city which deteriorated
that once deep Laguna de Bay.
I am there, standing on the pathway
that once part of the lake’s body,
jealous of the lake’s destruction.
I don’t know; perhaps it’s just me,
drowning in my deep thoughts
wanting to be visited
by low tide one day.
About the Author
John Lloyd C. Casoy is a public-school teacher in the Philippines. He has a bachelor’s degree in Bachelor of Secondary Education with a major in Filipino. Currently, he is writing his thesis for his master’s degree in Master of Arts in Filipino – Literature at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines.
John,
Yes… the deep thoughts last forever.
Stephen