Dawn (11/90)
No sun arose this morning,
No sun shall set tonight;
But never has a dawning
In my life yet shone so bright
As today has shone for me.
When I awoke to watch the sun,
Its rays divert the night,
The glorious goddess, golden one
Deigned not bestow her light
As I was wont to see.
So evermore when I revive
My heavy soul from rest
I’ll marvel how I am alive,
And what bestirs my breast,
Despite the sun, to be.
Time, Time (9/11/90)
"Look to the fields of withered grass, bent with wind and bleached by sun. "Look to the ancient oaken tree with gnarled trunk and stretched out limbs. "Look to the starlight twinkles far, far away, away deep in the blacknight sky. "Look to the waves on the ocean; and imagine when they'll reach the farthest shore, then - lashing back - begin their long return. "And think! dear child, of the generations that have come before - how many, how varied. "Think of the nameless numbers, and the numberless faces, each with a smile or frown, or some such gesture, and each a history. "Think of what language each might have spoken. They all have done so, through the years throughout the years. "And they have dreamed of you, some vaguely, some concretely. Some vision of you has endured, has prospered and declined, inspired and despaired, but mostly has delighted. "And today you have arrived!" The old man creaked as he sat himself down on the step. I could not understand his speech, it's meaning: this dance of spirits, which to him appeared as so familiar. He settled his body and turned his face toward me, with a crinkle in his lip and a small tear in his eye. (I would guess it was Joy he portrayed in this manner, or Hope; but there was so much in even such a simple seeming that I almost dare not attempt to interpret its intention.) "Time takes time," he said. "That's all! - Remember: Time takes time!" ...