
Old Man, Old Man
Young men, not knowing what to
remember,
Come to this hiding place of the moons and years,
To this Old
Man. Old Man, they say, where should we go?
Where did you find what you
remember? Was it perched in a tree?
Did it hover deep in the white water? Was
it covered over
With dead stalks in the grass? Will we taste it
If our
mouths have long lain empty?
Will we feel it between our eyes if we face the
wind
All night, and turn the color of earth?
If we lie down in the rain,
can we remember sunlight?
He answers, I have become the best and worst I
dreamed.
When I move my feet, the ground moves under them.
When I lie
down, I fit the earth too well.
Stones long underwater will burst in the
fire, but stones
Long in the sun and under the dry night
Will ring when
you strike them. Or break in two.
There were always many places to beg for
answers:
Now the places themselves have come in close to be told.
I have
called even my voice in close to whisper with it:
Every secret is as near as
your fingers.
If your heart stutters with pain and hope,
Bend forward over
it like a man at a small campfire.
~ David Wagoner ~
(Traveling Light)