THE SHORE

So the tide forgets, as morning

Grows too far delivered, as the bowls

Of rock and wood run dry.

What is left seems pearled and lit,

As those cases

Of the museum stood lit

With milk jade, rows of opaque vases

Streaked with orange and yellow smoke.

You found a lavender boat, a single

Figure poling upstream, baskets

Of pale fish wedged between his legs.

Today, the debris of winter

Stands stacked against the walls,

The coils of kelp lie scattered

Across the floor. The oil fire

Smokes. You turn down the lantern

Hung on its nail. Outside,

The boats aligned like sentinels.

Here beside the blue depot, walking

The pier, you can see the way

The shore

Approximates the dream, how distances

Repeat their deaths

Above these tables and panes of water—

As climbing the hills above

The harbor, up to the lupine drifting

Among the lichen-masked pines,

The night is pocked with lamps lit

On every boat offshore,

Galleries of floating stars. Below,

On its narrow tracks shelved

Into the cliff’s face,

The train begins its slide down

To the warehouses by the harbor. Loaded

With diesel, coal, paychecks, whiskey,

Bedsheets, slabs of ice—for the fish,

For the men. You lean on my arm,

As once

I watched you lean at the window;

The bookstalls below stretched a mile

To the quay, the afternoon crowd

Picking over the novels and histories.

You walked out as you walked out last

Night, onto the stone porch. Dusk

Reddened the walls, the winds sliced

Off the reefs. The vines of the gourds

Shook on their lattice. You talked

About that night you stood

Behind the black pane of the French

Window, watching my father read some long

Passage

Of a famous voyager’s book. You hated

That voice filling the room,

Its light. So tonight we make a soft

Parenthesis upon the sand’s black bed.

In that dream we share, there is

One shore, where we look out upon nothing

And the sea our whole lives;

Until turning from those waves, we find

One shore, where we look out upon nothing

And the earth our whole lives.

Where what is left between shore and sky

Is traced in the vague wake of

(The stars, the sandpipers whistling)

What we forgive. If you wake soon, wake me.