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Devin Johnston is the author of two books of poems, Aversions (Omnidawn, 2004) and Telepathy (Paper Bark, 2001), and a book of criticism, Precipitations: Contemporary American Poetry as Occult Practice (Wesleyan University Press, 2002). With Michael O'Leary, he edits Flood Editions.

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The Golden Hinde
by Devin Johnston

On Christmas Day, Kathleen and I
propel a raft with plastic spoons
through the hissing fur of surf,
         stirring as we go
         an Alka-Seltzer sun.

We pass Bolinas-Stinson School,
the fire house, and Smiley's dive;
extinguished geodesic domes
         along the mesa road
         where Cream Saroyan lives.

With a telescope, my sister spies
the erstwhile chemist of Argonne
who left his post to polish glass.
         As penance, he engraves
         a glyph of hydrogen

on the blank face of every cliff
from Monterey to Inverness.
Beside us, cormorants describe
         the chop in grunts, then plunge
         through thirty feet of grease.

I try to hold my breath as long
and cheat or fail. As evening comes
we pass the final spit of land.
         Once more around the Horn
         and then we'll make for home.


 
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