THE ESTUARY
By day we pace the many decks
of the stone boat
and at night we are turned out in its high windows
like stars of another side
taste our mouths we are the salt of the earth
salt is memory
in storm and cloud
we sleep in fine rigging like riding birds
taste our fingers
each with its own commandment
day or night it is harder to know than we know
but longer
we are asleep over charts at running windows
we are asleep with compasses in our hands
and at the bow of the stone boat
the wave from the ends of the earth keeps breaking
— W.S. Merwin, from his book The Compass Flower (1977, Alfred A. Knopf), and found in the collection Migration: New & Selected Poems, (2005, Copper Canyon Press), used by permission of the publishers. Copyright © 1977 by W. S. Merwin.
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Michael Morrison says
’77 Labor Day cheap overnite sail to Lanai, my first time there in that dry sandy windless clime. I carried my sleeping bag and cheap wine up thru sand dunes and scrub near Sweetheart Rock and settled in for a night of endless star gazing and wondering at my good fortune to be in an environment outside my imagination for the first time.