When one has lived a long time alone,
one wants to live again among men and women,
to return to that place where one's ties with the human
broke, where the disquiet of death and now also
of history glimmers in firelight on faces,
where the gaze of the new baby looks past the gaze
of the great granny, and where lovers speak,
on lips blowsy with kissing, that language
the same in each mouth, and like birds at daybreak
blether the song that is both earth's and heaven's,
until the son has risen, and they stand
in the daylight of being made one: kingdom come,
when one has lived a long time alone.
This is the last stanza of a much longer poem. I will post it in it's entirety when I get the full text.