On Driving Twice Through Alloway

Though my torn hands are clamped to unfamiliar steel
And fumble with the task of my lowly time,


Though the talk of my companions
Chatters and stutters like a sparking wheel,


Though our light pitches into grey, and all natural things with it,
And I, high above my natural home (and far beyond it),


Still I catch the secret flight of wing, and thank my cursed position;
Still I pass the common roof—in mind, alone—under which my true kinsmen lie;


Where they themselves, pre-occupied by thought, verse, line
Do prod the flames of solitude—


And like myself, forget all time.