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 The Long Boat by Stanley Kunitz 
						When his boat snapped loosefrom its mooring, under
 the screaking of the gulls,
 he tried at first to wave
 to his dear ones on shore,
 but in the rolling fog
 they had already lost their faces.
 Too tired even to choose
 between jumping and calling,
 somehow he felt absolved and free
 of his burdens, those mottoes
 stamped on his name-tag:
 conscience, ambition, and all
 that caring.
 He was content to lie down
 with the family ghosts
 in the slop of his cradle,
 buffeted by the storm,
 endlessly drifting.
 Peace! Peace!
 To be rocked by the Infinite!
 As if it didn't matter
 which way was home;
 as if he didn't know
 he loved the earth so much
 he wanted to stay forever.
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