On Swimming by Adam Zagajewski

 
The rivers of this country are sweet 
as a troubadour’s song, 
the heavy sun wanders westward
on yellow circus wagons.  
Little village churches 
hold a fabric of silence so fine
and old that even a breath
could tear it.  I love to swim in the sea, which keeps 
talking to itself
in the monotone of a vagabond
who no longer recalls
exactly how long he’s been on the road.  
Swimming is like a prayer: 
palms join and part,
join and part, almost without end.

~ from Without End: New and Selected Poems 
(Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC, 2002)
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