A Few Lines from Rehoboth Beach

Dear friend you were right: the smell of fish and foam

and algae makes one green smell together. It clears

my head. It empties me enough to fit down in my own

skin for a while, single-minded as a surfer. The first

day here, there was nobody, from one distance

to the other. Rain rose from the waves like steam,

dark lifted off the dark. All I could think of

were hymns, all I knew the words to: the oldest

motions tuning up in me. There was a horseshoe crab

shell, a translucent egg sac, a log of a tired jetty,

and another, and another. I walked miles, holding

my suffering deeply and courteously, as if I were holding

a package for somebody else who would come back

like sunlight. In the morning, the boardwalk opened

wide and white with sun, gulls on one leg in the slicks.

Cold waves, cold air, and people out in heavy coats,

arm in arm along the sheen of waves. A single boy

in shorts rode his skim board out thigh high, making

intricate moves across the March ice water. I thought

he must be painfully cold, but, I hear you say, he had

all the world emptied, to practice his smooth stand.