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Home Poetry Children's Poems

‘Dragons Lost at Sea’: A Poem by Isabella Simmonds

December 9, 2024
in Children's Poems, Culture, Poetry
A A
14

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Dragons Lost at Sea

In salty seas green dragons fly the waves,
With plastic scales—a man-made guard from rot.
Submerged to sleep in rocky water caves;
Bereft of flames they blow and bubble not.
A cargo ship of Lego spilt the lot,
And tiny bricks are drifting round the deep;
A micro-world of figures hard to spot,
In tides’ unceasing briny brushing sweep.
Against the surf they bob where dolphins leap,
And beachcomb hunters seeking matchless grails
Are playing shipwrecked games of find and keep
Where beaches change and flotsam’s strewn by gales.
A thousand years may pass but pieces stay,
With dragons who were sunk one stormy day.

.

Poet’s Note: This poem is inspired by the true story of a cargo ship that was hit by a freak storm off the coast of Cornwall, England in 1997 and dumped sea-themed Lego into the sea. The Legos still turn up on the beaches there today.  

.

.

Isabella Simmonds is a British musician and piano teacher living in London. 

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Comments 14

  1. Roy Eugene Peterson says:
    10 months ago

    Wonderful and imaginative poem about the wreck of a ship carrying plastic Legos that actually sunk. At first, I thought it was about a child playing with something plastic in a bathtub until I read your note. Fun poem with creativity.

    Reply
    • Isabella says:
      10 months ago

      Thank you very much Roy! I’m so pleased you found it fun.
      The link in the poet’s note doesn’t seem to be working.
      Here is the article that inspired it:

      https://news.sky.com/story/lego-lost-at-sea-how-a-search-for-five-million-figurines-lost-off-the-coast-of-cornwall-in-1997-uncovered-an-underwater-world-of-plastic-toys-12531058

      Reply
  2. Ivy Joew says:
    10 months ago

    This Spenserian sonnet is a prime example of how poetry can encapsulate and—were Lady Fortuna to turn the gubernāculum one’s way—immortalize ephemera much more beautifully and economically than any report or essay.

    Reply
    • Isabella says:
      10 months ago

      Thank you for your comment. Yes indeed, much more fun to write too.

      Reply
  3. Joseph S. Salemi says:
    10 months ago

    This is a nice sonnet, and the subject is contemporary. In one section of the South Pacific there is a huge mass of floating plastic debris, as big as the state of Texas. It grows every year, and will certainly take centuries to dissipate, if it ever does at all.

    Reply
  4. Isabella says:
    10 months ago

    Thank you for commenting. Yes that is incredibly large and very detrimental to the wildlife of the oceans.

    Reply
  5. Margaret Coats says:
    10 months ago

    Isabella, your title and poetic diction and Spenserian sonnet form elevate the Legos nicely. I’m glad they’ve become a desirable item for beachcombers, as the find-and-keep game helps clean beaches. I have sometimes found sea glass which, unlike plastic, transforms beautifully in tumbling by waves for a relatively short time. Glass, almost all sand to begin with, is a natural material–and sea glass is so desirable it is artificially produced to be sold for jewelry and other decorative purposes.

    Reply
    • Joseph S. Salemi says:
      10 months ago

      I first found sea glass on the beach near Dover Castle in England. The shores in the U.K. are sometimes pebbly rather than sandy, and this seems to produce sea glass more quickly. I noticed it at first because of the different way it reflected sunlight when wet. Only later, when examining it more closely, did I realize it was shards of glass that had been tumbled smooth by the constant motion of waves in the surf.

      I collected a large bag of it over the years, from many different places. Since bottles of all colors are broken and tossed by the sea, the sea glass was multicolored like a lot of mixed candy. When a colleague at work told me that he was going to refashion his aquarium tank, I offered him the glass to spread at the bottom instead of sand, and he gratefully accepted it.

      Reply
    • Isabella says:
      10 months ago

      Thank you so much for your comment Margaret. Oh yes sea glass is beautiful! All tumbled smooth and shaped by the ceaseless waves. I’m not surprised that it is now artificially produced.

      Reply
  6. Paul A. Freeman says:
    10 months ago

    What a brilliantly encapsulated tale, Isabella.

    I was reminded of a 1992 incident when a container of rubber ducks fell overboard (29,000 of them) and helped oceanographers map Pacific Ocean currents!

    Reply
  7. Isabella says:
    10 months ago

    Thank you so much Paul! I haven’t heard of that particular maritime incident. Rubber ducks in the Pacific! A great story for a poem!

    Reply
  8. Susan Jarvis Bryant says:
    10 months ago

    Isabella, what an unusual and beautiful sonnet that shines with melodious language and exciting imagery. I love every Lego-laden line. Great stuff!

    Reply
    • Isabella says:
      10 months ago

      Thank you very much Susan for your lovely comment. It is most appreciated.

      Reply
  9. Mimin Zomi says:
    10 months ago

    This sonnet of yours is actually good. Brevity of words, elegance, mastery of the language. I will like to connect with you if you are on facebook where my username is Mimin Zomi, with ‘Invictus anima” written on my bio. I wish to see more of your works.

    Reply

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