On Being Given Time
Sometimes it seems to be the inmost land
All children still inhabit when alone.
They play the game of morning without end,
And only lunch can bring them, startled, home
Bearing in triumph a small speckled stone.
Yet even for them, too much dispersal scatters;
What complex form the simplest game may hold!
And all we know of time that really matters
We’ve learned from moving clouds and waters
Where we see form and motion lightly meld.
Not the clock’s tick and its relentless bind
But the long ripple that opens out beyond
The duck as he swims down the tranquil pond,
Or when a wandering, falling leaf may find
And follow the formal downpath of the wind.
It is, perhaps, our most complex creation,
A lovely skill we spend a lifetime learning,
Something between the world of pure sensation
And the world of pure thought, a new relation,
As if we held in balance the globe turning.
Even a year’s not long, yet moments are.
This moment, yours and mine, and always given,
When the leaf falls, the ripple opens far,