Waiting in Line
You the very old, I have come to the edge of your country and looked across, how your eyes warily look into mine when we pass, how you hesitate when we approach a door. Sometimes I understand how steep your hills are, and your way of seeing the madness around you, the careless waste of the calendar, the rush of people on buses. I have studied how you carry packages, balancing them better, giving them attention. I have glimpsed from within the gray-eyed look at those who push, and occasionally even I can achieve your beautiful bleak perspective on the loud, the inattentive, shoving boors jostling past you toward their doom. With you, from the pavement I have watched the nation of the young, like jungle birds that scream as they pass, or gyrate on playgrounds, their frenzied bodies jittering with the disease of youth. Knowledge can cure them. But Not all at once. It will take time. There have been evenings when the light has turned everything silver, and like you I have stopped at a corner and suddenly staggered with the grace of it all: to have inherited all this, or even the bereavement of it, and finally being cheated!--the chance to stand on a corner and tell it goodbye! Every day, every evening, every abject step or stumble has become heroic:-- You others, we the very old have a country. A passport costs everything there is. --William Stafford
The Darkness Around Us Is Deep, William Stafford, 1993