There is a solitude that comes before words, and one that waits for them. This poem is about the second kind — the moment you stop running from the quiet house and hear, at last, a voice that answers from inside it.
Evening comes down like an open hand.
I stop walking. I am not waiting for anyone.
On the lip of the old well, the water is still.
I lean over — and my own voice comes back.
It is simpler than I expected,
more worn, and more faithful too.
I do not ask it where the others have gone.
It answers: — You are still here.
So I take the road again,
slower now, with a steadier heart.
The well keeps what I told it.
The night gives me back my name.


