The Wreck - Don Paterson
But what lovers we were, what lover,
Even when it was all over -
the deadweight bull-black wines we swung towards each other rang and rang
like bells of blood, our own great hearts. We slung the drunk boat out of port
and watched our unreal sober life unmoor, a continent of grief;
The candlelight strange on our faces like the silent tiny blazes
And coruscations of its wars. We blew them out and took the stairs
Into the night for the night's work, stripped off in the timbered dark,
Gently hooked each other on like aqualungs, and thundered down
To mine our lovely secret wreck. We surfaced later, breathless, back
To back, then made our way alone up the mined beach of the dawn.
Big Book Of Poetry
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