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 The tide throws itself over the land 
so suddenly that we call it storm, 
as if a thing were simply its cause. 
Thunder shakes our bones like dank justice 
as bright veins of lighting search out 
their evidence. Something stands accused, 
and I, having forgotten how to pray, 
can only hope that the clouds will break 
somewhere above the Atlantic. 

Elsewhere, unseen, ships really bob 
idly upon the water. Sailors really 
gaze out over a constant field of crushed 
sapphire and remember the unbearably 
flowering land; people who wake, suddenly and confused, 
in restless rooms, from dreaming mouthfuls of sand, 
and whose dreams travel outward, 
like dark waves beneath angry skies, until something 
stops them. 

When the storm recedes briefly, I travel along 
the rain-washed path until I am alone 
on the hill, alone with the dumb waves. 
We delude ourselves with the siren, 
with this beast that calls irresistibly 
in an iridescent, scaly voice from out there
But a crime has occurred here on earth. 
 

The elder maple tree in the yard 
insists that it is growing, steadily, but all I ever see 
is obeisance to the slick, trunk-cracking wind. 
No, I think, you cannot scare me with 
the pirate’s saber, nor the thick drowning kiss. 
But there is something, 
as the cool presaging wind rakes the grass, 
that cannot be endured. The first drops fall 
for a second time, and 
I try to imagine peace the colour blue; 
yes, the sea, I can tell, is angry, 
even if it knows not why. 

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