I have fought my independence
in your soul’s marshes,
played Sumter and Marion
in the fields and pastures
of your heart.
I have shot at Cornwallis
behind your live-oaks,
have risen from your swamps
like a cypress knee,
my head breaking
your still, sinning waters,
my roots sunken
in your remembering mud.
My childhood has exploded
in your embrace,
a celebrating cherry-bomb
on Christmas Eves.
My adolescence was mirrored
in your brooding waters,
in their tree-bark blackness.
We have lived always
separate,
unequal–
you with your time-spawning past,
me, too much on the move
to ever call you home.
But in distant towns,
I hesitate now
in a quiet dusk,
disquieted,
stopping now
in a dust,
unsettled
by my memories of you.
Dreaming yet
the dreams of our independence.