I was afraid.
I came from Ur, of Sumer, and I trusted their gods. My father told me that first came the deep, then the mountain of heaven and earth, then the air which split the mountain. He taught me of An the father, Ki the Earth, and he told me tales of Enki, the crafty one, dragon slayer and creator, father of the great Euphrates. He spoke to me of Inanna the princess of spring, and of Enlil, father of the gods.
But even then a voice came to me like fire and then I had no soul but the fire, and I could not stay where I was nor be what I had been any longer.
We spoke for a long time, as the torch of evening plunged into night. I did not know it at the time, having never seen the sea, but his voice was the sound of the waves crashing on the rocks, power and grace. I would follow that sound when I could find nothing else to follow, when the words he spoke then dwindled for me, like a campfire does as night surrounds it.
I cannot remember the exact words he used. I only remember the sound of his voice, and the way the night flickered where he stood. I only remember being afraid, and knowing that I had to leave. And after he left, I remember I stood for a long time listening to the voices of those goats, watching over my still and quiet land, where I had been born and raised and spent my youth, where the hand of Enki spread its abundance among my simple people. My father's land, covering my father's bone. That, I will never forget.
I sat for a long time at the entrance of my tent, watching the night and the dancing stars, the messengers of the gods, their lamps on the starry ways. And I listened to the sweet breath of my wife sighing from the pallet we had shared together. And I listened to the wind.
And the sun rose slowly, and I remember the stars vanishing, the many stars, and then there was one.
And I remember, as the sun rose, I climbed the little hill, and the little clumps of grass crackled under my feet as the frost melted from them. And in the cool, glowing light of morning I looked out over the land, and I watched as all the little living things struggled again towards the light and I said yes, I will leave, yes, I will find a new land.