The Bath

Washing Kai in the sauna, The kerosene lantern set on a box outside the ground-level windows, Lights up the edge of the iron stove and the washtub down on the slab Steaming air and crackle of water drops brushed by on the pile of rocks on top He stands in warm water Soap all over the smooth of his thigh and stomach "Gary don't soap my hair!" -his eye-sting fear- the soapy hand feeling through and around the globes and curves of his body, up in the crotch, And washing-tickling out of the scrotum, little anus, his penis curving up and getting hard as I pull back skin and try to wash it Laughing and jumping, flinging arms around, I squat all naked too, is this our body? Sweating and panting in the stove-steam hot-stone cedar-planking wooden bucket water-splashing kerosene lantern-flicker wind-in-the-pines-out sierra forest ridges night- Masa comes in, letting fresh cool air sweep down from the door a deep sweet breath And she tips him over gripping neatly, one knee down her hair falling hiding one whole side of shoulder, breast, and belly, Washes deftly Kai's head-hair as he gets mad and yells- The body of my lady, the winding valley spine, the space between the thighs I reach through, cup her curving vulva arch and hold it from behind, a soapy tickle a hand of grail The gates of Awe The open back a turning double-mirror world of wombs in wombs, in rings, that start in music, is this our body? The hidden place of seed The veins net flow across the ribs, that gathers mild and peaks up in a nipple-fits our mouth- The sucking milk from this our body sends through jolts of light; the son, the father, sharing mother's joy That brings a softness to the flower of the awesome open curling lotus gate I cup and kiss As Kai laughs at his mother's breast he now is weaned from, we wash earch other, this our body: Clean, and rinsed, and sweating more, we stretch out on the redwood benches hearts all beating Quient to the simmer of the stove, the scent of cedar And then turn over, murmuring gossip of the grasses, talking firewood, Wondering how Gen's napping, how to bring him in soon wash him too- These boys who love their mother who loves men, who passes on her sons to other women; The cloud across the sky. The windy pines. The trickle gurgle in the swampy meadow this is our body. Fire inside and boiling water on the stove We sigh and slide ourselves down from the benches wrap the babies, step ourside, black night and all the stars. Pour cold water on the back and thighs Go in the house-stand steaming by the center fire Kai scampers on the sheepskin Gen standing hanging on and shouting, "Bao! bao! bao! bao! bao! This is our body. Drawn up crosslegged by the flames drinking icy water hugging babies, kissing bellies, Laughing on the Great Earth Come out from the bath. By Gary Snyder
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