From far-out depths they come, 
   swell swelling swell,
   'til cresting they salute the sky
   and tumble towards sand that waits immemorially
   to receive them.
Summer upon summer
   we played there
   while our species slid submarines
   bigger than whales
   into those depths
   and children of fathers like you
   rode waves to beaches
   where met our clashing causes
   and death met death as no ocean could devise.
   Nor could any picnic on safe sands
   take from our generation
   our fear of beaches.
But you, on your own ridge of years,
   taught me, beached and fearful of breakers,
   to wade into them,
   to turn and join their fling towards land.
   Together we felt those last foamy energies
   that bounded us playfully upon smooth sand
   as though we belonged to both sea and shore.
   
   I see you yet, riding that curved-up moving hill
   assuring us your children
   that, rightly ridden, the sea pushes safely to shore.
   Your wave-riding done, I follow you still
   with other generations bobbing behind—
   I next, all of us beach-destined.
But you touched wave and beach
   with father's love for boy.
   I ride my time's wave now,
   trusting still your trust:
 "It moves towards home."
Donald W. Shriver Jr., president emeritus of Union Theological Seminary, is the author of Honest Patriots: Loving a Country Enough to Remember Its Misdeeds. He was born and raised in Norfolk, Virginia.
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