John Betjeman




East Anglian Bathe

Oh when the early morning at the seaside
    Took us with hurrying steps from Horsey Mere
To see the whistling bent-grass on the leeside
    And then the tumbled breaker-line appear,
On high, the clouds with mighty adumbration
    Sailed over us to seaward fast and clear
And jellyfish in quivering isolation
    Lay silted in the dry sand of the breeze
And we, along the table-land of beach blown
    Went gooseflesh from our shoulders to our knees
And ran to catch the football, each to each thrown,
    In the soft and swirling music of the seas.

There splashed about our ankles as we waded
    Those intersecting wavelets morning-cold,
And sudden dark a patch of sea was shaded,
    And sudden light, another patch would hold
The warmth of whirling atoms in a sun-shot
    And underwater sandstorm green and gold.
So in we dived and louder than a gunshot
    Sea-water broke in fountains down the ear.
How cold the bathe, how chattering cold the drying,
    How welcoming the inland reeds appear,
The wood-smoke and the breakfast and the frying,
    And your warm freshwater ripples, Horsey Mere.