You cannot see the waves breaking against welted
shoals,
but in the rocking of our chair, maybe you hear
the whispering of
the sea, biting acetylene,
or cries of tern and gull, brine-stung; maybe you
hear
the uncaged waters gasping against hasp and hull,
salt fumes
hissing, scalps flensed from bile-dark brine.
In your shirt's rustling, I
hear sailcloth in wind,
ropes lashed and pulling against the mast.
In our
chair's rasp against pine boards, I hear
the creak of oarlocks, a broken
scull scraping against keel.
I hear spume soaking a bowsprit crisped with
salt,
as I rock into your torso, your human shore.
Come nearer, nearer,
for I want to see what you see
--
Dress me in burlap and bone,
wrap me in musk and dulse, in human
moss,
shine me a lighthouse's scalding gold;
comfort me with wine and
sole, come to me
with a severed branch of coral, a fistful of wet
wings;
sing me the gauze of dusk and salt, nights full of sulfurous
foam,
lead me through the narcotic dark to a bed
of coats, your stubbled
face grazing my throat,
for I want to feel your eyelids touching my lips when
I sleep,
I want to feel the bones of your silence pressing against my own.
~ Suji Kwock Kim ~
(Notes From The Divided
Country)
(left button to play, right button
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