![]() |
Heceta
Head
A Wm. Stafford poem |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Tomorrow
will have an island. Before night
I always find it. Then on to the next island.
These places hidden in the day separate
and come forward if you beckon.
But you have to know they are there before they exist.
Some time
there will be a tomorrow without any island.
So far, I haven't let that happen, but after
I'm gone others may become faithless and careless.
Before them will tumble the wide unbroken sea,
and without any hope they will stare at the horizon.
So to you,
Friend, I confide my secret:
to be a discoverer you hold close whatever
you find, and after a while you decide
what it is. Then, secure in where you have been,
you turn to the open sea and let go.
Heceta Head—William Stafford
![]() |
|
|
William Stafford Oregon Poet Laureate 1914-1993 |
|
| WHEN WILLIAM
STAFFORD DIED by Robert Bly Well, water goes down the Montana gullies. "I'll just go around this rock and think About it later." That's what you said. When death came, you said, "I'll go there." There's no sign you'll come back. Sometimes One dusk you were gone. Sometimes a fallen tree If all a man does is to watch from the shore, |