ETYMOLOGY

Her body by the fire

Mimicked the light-conferring midnights

Of philosophy.

Suppose they are dead now.

Isn’t “dead now” an odd expression?

The sound of the owls outside

And the wind soughing in the trees

Catches in their ears, is sent out

In scouting parties of sensation down their spines.

If you say it became language or it was nothing,

Who touched whom?

In what hurtle of starlight?

Poor language, poor theory

Of language. The shards of skull

In the Egyptian museum looked like maps of the wind-eroded

Canyon labyrinths from which,

Standing on the verge

In the yellow of a dwindling fall, you hear

Echo and re-echo the cries of terns

Fishing the worked silver of a rapids.

And what to say of her wetness? The Anglo-Saxons

Had a name for it. They called it silm.

They were navigators. It was also

Their word for the look of moonlight on the sea.