Fog and Rain. Seagulls and Rusty Chains

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Lift bushel sacks with barrel backs

and we

keep on lifting

till break, water and ale, bread for gruel, slim

oysters still wet from morning pulls.

We

push and pull,

start afternoons early.

To finish before sun goes belly up in the sky

is fat pockets, full stomach and drinking as fog

finally lifts up

and off the marsh. I do it because

I don’t want to go home.

We do it

because we are young muscled

and like the women and the sack,

Ally’s opium cakes on Saturday nights,

fat lumps of sugar on our finger tips.

I like sweets

and listening to soft rain,

a woman’s voice playing fine music on my bones

steamboats coming in every hour

to buy my oysters,

my clams,

shaking rust off their chains before they claim

the open sea for Steam City,

Boston, some port south of Carolina’s elbow.

We pack it in

and spend, spend, spend,

our luck our love our money

fog grows fat, seagulls cry and cry,

spit bones and shells. Somewhere

off in the murk, a chain falls into the water.

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⏰ Last updated: Sep 29, 2012 ⏰

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