On Sundays I watch the hermits coming out of their holes

Into the light. Their cliff is as full as a hive.

They crowd together on warm shoulders of rock

Where the sun has been shining, their joints crackle.

They begin to talk after a while.

I listen to their accents, they are not all

From this island, not all old,

Not even, I think, all masculine.

They are so wise, they do not pretend to see me.

They drink from the scattered pools of melted snow:

I walk right by them and drink when they have done.

I can see the marks of chains around their feet.

I call this my work, these decades and stations —

Because, without these, I would be a stranger here.