Hand over hand.
The sail climbs the mast,
it billows on the breeze,
heaves the hull forward.
How many times
Has a sail raised
by a halyard’s pull?
Have squinted eyes
scanned windward
for the next gust?
Has a tight fist
played out a sheet line
as a bow crashed
through the waves?
Hand over hand.
The main sheet is trimmed
it pulls in the boom,
close-hauled to the wind.
How many times
Has a boat been cast
from mooring
to ride the wind’s push?
Have the leeward wave-edges
darkened as a sailor leaned
further over the gunwale
to hold course?
Have these simple partners,
wind and sail
carried humans off to anywhere?
Hand over hand.
My daughter throws knotted coils of bow line
off the boat, screeching with joy
as they splash in the water.
I trim this old scow’s twisted rigging
and think of the subdued power
in these creaking boards and mildewed knots
to connect people through ages
the same way that their sail and keel connect
water and sky.

Nice!
RWN III
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