I go to the door often. Night and summer. Crickets lift their cries. I know you are out. You are driving late through the summer night.
I do not know what will happen. I have no claim on you. I am one star you have as guide; others love you, the night so dark over the Azores.
You have been working outdoors, gone all week. I feel you in this lamp lit so late. As I reach for it I feel myself driving through the night.
I love a firmness in you that disdains the trivial and regains the difficult. You become part then of the firmness of night, the granite holding up walls.
There were women in Egypt who supported with their firmness the stars as they revolved, hardly aware of the passage from night to day and back to night.
I love you where you go through the night, not swerving, clear as the indigo bunting in her flight, passing over two thousand miles of ocean.