Lengthways on a towel,
letting some sun into my life
in its guise as a naked white chest,
I’m reading a book,
one page every ten minutes,
the rest of the time observing
the out-of shape, middle-aged man
dripping wet, red-faced,
struggling out of the sea
or his freckled wife
in wide-brimmed hat,
sitting on a rock,
inured to the lousy shape he’s in,
ignoring his slow, bent-back,
laborious walk up the sand toward her.
Three of us,
none as young as we were,
thinking the cure is
a tan or quick dip
or even indifference.
They pack up their stuff
and leave.
Maybe it’s back to the motel
and miserable sex.
Or dinner at an expensive restaurant,
wasting money on their lousy appetites.
Alone, I watch the ocean roll in,
unfathomably old but always new.
You don’t get that with people.
They’re born.
They die.
And, in between,
they bronze a little.