The Well

As for the lily, who knows

if what we face isn’t the laughter

of one who went while the time seemed green

for going, or a voice

one room ahead of our own dreaming, and we die

at the crest of each day’s spending

away. As prow and the surrendered foam

go on forgetting, our very looking is the light

feasting on the light. As for hunger,

each must cross to a body as yet unnamed.

Who needs a heart unless it’s one we share

with a many-windowed sea? A heart,

and not the dark it moves through, not the waves

it births, but, visited by blood, unoccupied,

is the very wheel installing day, the well

from which paired hands set out, happy

to undress a terrifying and abundant yes.