the river Eyn, between outstretched hands flows to lands farther than ear has heard or eyes have searched and they say the land twists and shifts at her end 'til one is sailing up again
She flows like drowsy eyes in midafternoon daze languidly stretching back and forth before the haze the foggy mists that sit atop her skin smooth surface shade from daylight her sailors sleeping to sail the moonlight
I stood atop my little ship to see the faces of passers-by who watch the ships from shoreside
On each face I looked so long but always obscured was the evening sun what tree or branch, or mist or shade I cannot see what faces made
Dreary drowsy eyes begin to close she will close them, Eyn so I might sail the moonlight midnight's rays of clear and blue and bathe pensive in cerulean hue.