I recently wrote a poem about Katsushika Hokusai’s great wave:
"off Kanagawa" a woodblock print nicely colored and wonderful to look at.
In the poem I mention the waves of my childhood beach
called “Horseneck” beach and how the waves were
"wetter" than Hokusai’s wave which is understandable.
but within the poem, the Horseneck waves were as dry as Hokusai's wave.
I also mentioned Horesneck surfers as a fill-in to the poem where
they really didn’t belong.
but their presence within the poem got me thinking about motion,
about what moves us from one place to another.
Hokusai’s tremendous wave holds a couple of long boats
paddling into it. these are “Oshiokuri-Bune” boats,
fishing barges, each holding a dozen or so oarsmen.
the boats are intended to move forward as the sea moves below them
and against them as the rowers struggle to move against the wave.
this is unlike the movement of an escalator going up with multiple
riders as the escalator moves them, but on the escalator nobody paddles.
inside the busy Buick Roadmaster, the mechanisms of the machine
move it forward but the road lays motionless and flat beneath it
just like the paper holding Hokusai’s wood-block wave print.
when I'm gone the ash will be motionless but it will turn with the Earth.