GREAT BLUE HERON AT BURNETT BRIDGE

You took me in the sun
to your home-

town, to the tidal
marsh, to the
bridge


where you jump

into me.

___

a great
blue

heron
stills
its gait
to wait
in the shallows
poised
watching for
shadows
to wend
the cold
currents
under
the surface

___

Once there was a door
that jammed
at the thought of itself.

You open the door
to reveal a gate you open
to another door—

The morning sun
slants into me,
a sharp fire in crisp air.

By night,
I was ashamed to cry
into your chest.

___

At sea, conifers climb roughhewn
rock of islands. Upstream, plovers

pipe the ploughheads of beaks
into mud for invertebrates. Can you

see trees walk
?
Can you see beneath
the mud, into the fishhold word

plover
?
Can you see a door’s
fleshhood swell against its jam
?

___

the gulf
      between
        stasis and
          patience
gapes
      awaiting
        water’s
          return
or the calendar
      days I count
                until
          it is humid
between us
      until you
jump into
          the water
until I
      again can
warm
      my ear on
your neck

___

The in-tide will return,
you will splash, the drops
will kiss the earth
with diamonds.

At home I open all the doors
to let in sea-liquor, wind,
songs of the birds whose
names I have yet to learn.

___

& the firs cling
to their island rocks.

& the herons release
their jeweled shames.

& the world invites us
to stillness.