Under
Stars
The
sleep of this night deepens 
because
I have walked coatless from the house 
carrying
the white envelope. 
All
night it will say one name 
in
its little tin house by the roadside. 
I
have raised the metal flag 
so
its shadow under the roadlamp 
leaves
an imprint on the rain-heavy bushes. 
Now
I will walk back 
thinking
of the few lights still on 
in
the town a mile away. 
In
the yellowed light of a kitchen 
the
millworker has finished his coffee, 
his
wife has laid out the white slices of bread 
on
the counter. Now while the bed they have left 
is
still warm, I will think of you, you 
who
are so far away 
you
have caused me to look up at the stars. 
Tonight
they have not moved 
from
childhood, those games played after dark. 
Again
I walk into the wet grass 
toward
the starry voices. Again, I 
am
the found one, intimate, returned 
by
all I touch on the way.
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