There is a quiet dignity in meeting dawn alone. When the world is still wrapped in soft gray, and the first light stretches gently over hills and streets, he was already walking—steady, unhurried, as if time itself had paused to watch.
“Dawn met him well along” suggests more than an early hour; it speaks of readiness, of having journeyed far enough that even the sunrise feels like a companion rather than a stranger. Perhaps he carried burdens, or perhaps he carried hope—but either way, the morning greeted him kindly.
In this moment, between night and day, there is clarity. No noise, no demands—only the rhythm of footsteps and the slow bloom of light. It is here, in the simplicity of dawn, that one finds the courage to continue.