homecoming

there are places, and times,
moments at the center of deep circles revolving with the Spirit,
that call up a constant returning, the natural
movement of the soul, entranced and etched.
I am four or five years old, no more,
sitting up in the front, yellow pine boards beneath,
dirt road and loblolly pines without, inside—
white walls, and congregants, pastor, choir,
all black—all but my father, and me, guests,
the old south’s color line not yet a distant memory,
still fresh, and I do not yet know that it is
what I feel at the back of my neck,
but only a tinge. what I remember is
the power of the place, all the faces now, even my father’s,
indistinct in the more than thirty years passed, a generation’s
worth, but the sound and the glory are clear
and present, I am certain that
the roof fairly shook that Sunday morning.
it is shaking still

a going to water

going down to the water I
lay aside my clothes on the rhythmic stone and
immerse with slow steady waves my body
in the warm and then the cold bands of the river,
a fine silt rising, hot sun, long dry summer
pulling off the flow, rounded rocks
now banded with the declines of day by day.
damselflies, chromatic colors on slender wings,
float locked in their coital calligrams, a pair
alight on my skin, bright in the strong sun.
each their own and each all the other’s,
the ten thousand things rise as life’s aether,
the sandstone bluffs above riddled
with the stone turned traces of it all
in mudflat varves and delta bottoms,
it all cycles back and is new and is old again,
going down to the water,
again and again and again.