I Love You, Sailor
The sand tickles the arches of his feet, gripping/sticking
to them as
faithful
as the man who carried the cross.
Poseidon's bathtub separates him from the Mexicans, and
a child stares across the same water many miles to the
south to form
180 degrees of
understanding.
Even the
gulls are silent. He realizes he mistook Jupiter for
Venus all of his life.
All of his life, walking
on the sand above sleeping crabs, cigarette
butts, lost
wedding rings--
the tide (Poseidon's faucet) gargles salt
up his ankles into his blue jeans.
How great it is that so many things are
alive
at night!
He breathes
not a scent but a sound
from across the water
past the frothy crests
past circling fish and knotted kelp
past another nation that says
I love you, Sailor.
If there was ever a moment to
dig to China, it was now, but
he had
no shovel, just
scraps of weathered wood and a
soul
freshly exculpated
by Jupiter's touch.
Exculpated. Nice word. Nice poem.
ReplyDeletethis is excellent.
ReplyDeleteThanks/love to both of y'all.
ReplyDelete