Salt and tears
From the Point
the light
sweeps low
cutting through
the mist
and snow.
Then I hear
the foghorn blow,
the billows roar,
and sense the
thunder
of maroons
calling men
brave and true
to leave
their beds
and save
some souls
upon the sea.
There is a
certain purity
to the anger
of the ocean
and a brotherhood
monk-like
in their devotion
to this element.
On nights
like these
the weather frees
all but initiates
from this worship.
For good or bad
the sea is impartial
in a judgement
spelled out
in bones,
churchyard stones,
and weeping widows
in empty homes.
On nights
like these
I am cured
of my disease
and bless
the chance
that the
sea God's
glance
falls on better
men than me.
For I am done
with salt
and tears
and I may stay
neat and clean
tucked up
with the girl
of my dreams
in the cottage
by the shore
and I need
brave the
sea no more.