“It often seems to me that it is better to be asleep than to find yourself without companions 
And insist so. And what can you do in this state of suspense, what say? 
I do not know. 
And what is the use of poets in a mean spirited time?” 
 
--Friedrich Hoelderlin, (quoted by George Seferis at the beginning of Log Book 1, Roderick Beaton translation.) 
 
After yet another oppressive 
Day, what with Covid-19 
 
And a society and government— 
Dare I say world?— 
 
In apparent disarray, to wake up 
In the dead of night, say 
 
Four-thirty, and remain transfixed 
There in the darkness unable 
 
To go back to sleep, anxious 
To witness one more glorious 
 
Morning unfolding slowly 
Its dawning 
 
Sheets of blinding light, 
Wide-eyed awake forever 
 
And ever before you 
To your dying day.