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Learn to Sail

On a grey day in the green sea, under the moon, the wind howling, the waves walloping, enveloped in slime as a newborn, on the cold wooden floors of a glossy blue jack boat, with a thick, white canvas sail – born alone – whitecaps rolling and breaking flurry blistering, the small boat, like a model, rocking, is blown in all directions... Trapped lying back, like a turtle, knees and elbows wiggle, suddenly the malleable hand clutches a near dry piece of bread on the floor and swats it into dry chewing swallows – thirsty... A hard wave pushing up and back the little body flips, moving on hands and knees toward a jar of water at the tip of the hollow bow while crawling past, the rough-hewn mast, a wave hiccups and the soft shoulder bumps – like clay it’s remolded, one up, one down dragging along, limp a tumble over... A fast gust and a whirling gyration of a tip, the too-weak weak, small hands that tickle when trying to twist the metal lid off the jar, leave the thirst caking the roof of his mouth desert, tongue parched. waves sprinkling a cool mist on those tender cheeks. A heaving swell billows the swaying jack and wheels the balmy tot towards the flat-backed stern. on his way rolling he collides again with the mast, and his workable spine folds in two: he is dead. An awesome tempest that will come in the morning has sent scouts, and with them whispering hums of expected carnage, that rattle the polished blue clapboards. The floor had been dry once, under the moonlight – on that orphic birth, the whole floor, everything but the damp shadow of primordial ooze underneath the fretful body, kicking and clawing to flip, had all been dusty like a shop. And in some moments, when this poem wasn’t watching, the unsubstantial body would run one of the tenuous fingers from one of its embryonic, plushy hands across the coarse plywood – slimmer than a board an amateur martial artist might brag about breaking, And he would build, along the wood floor, little trails of dust, his extremity mindlessly tracking to create aisles that ants might march through, the little walls of the finger’s wake like tan snowbanks. The gale came and passed, and in the sunny blue morning we found that the boat had kicked the mangled infant’s body out into the clear sea. Cheeks no longer dry like sawdust, eternally pruned, saturated: sponge of a boy who spent a dead lifetime floating through the great storm, water lapping over his face with the sort of pothering, hasty turmoil that would dilute a breathing man to madness but had come and with salt cleaned his face and body, with the sort of peace we’d like to find on shores.
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Written by
la-hall
American
Published
May 9, 2013
Lines·Words
110·472
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