Today it's Thursday. Wasn't it just
Monday? Everything's moving too fast.
Every day seems to bring some new
betrayal of what we want to keep.
Buses and trains leave the station,
but at least they return. The neighbor's
dog barks when the postman brings the mail,
yet I haven't heard from you. It's been
nearly five years. Still, I collect
flickers of things— the shadow of leaves
on the trellis. Small, hard buds
emerging from nodes on the fig tree,
though the rest of it is still
shrouded in winter sleep. Evening
is a well into which the dark pours,
so we can pull it up just one small pail
at a time. But time, time is the windlass
to which all things— and we— are lashed.


