Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Seaside Sensibilities

 

Where earth and sea hone

one another along their edge,

they go to remember or learn

anew if they had forgotten all

 

how receptive and easy to meet

for water subtle and white sand

can be—by making themselves

and their sunlit bodies parallel

 

to how bright and acute minds are

toward otherwise unreachable or

elusive, nay unfathomable truths,

 

finding old bits of lost happiness

thus in their unwearied listening

to love murmur passed by breeze.

Where Spirit Blanked out, There Poetry Died

 

There is no such thing as a blank slate

as there is no such thing as a blank

canvas and as there is no such thing

as a truly blank eye unless it is dead.

 

For, in front of all that patent void

supposed emptiness, and utter

nothingness, and even there

right inside, a spirit stays alive,

 

and ever some mind is at work

which, like Penelope of old,

either weaves or tears off

 

its veiling shrouds—setting up

the necessity of those moments

that turn fates and time around.

Of the Greatest Kindness and Homecoming of Loves True

 

Recounting Socrates’ myth of Er,

Plato says that souls of the damned

are deafened most where the exit

from Hell is closest and at hand,

 

and so deaf to music’s finest points

they stay affixed to torture and death

in true harmonies’ abysmal disconnect

while love which can’t be love at all

 

unless it’s love of the beautiful and good,

kalokagathos, that makes better, even whole,

those who turn themselves into its temple

and home—rising out of the blue within.

 

But doesn’t such one love’s stir, shiver,

and soar come and roll like drunken

tenderness, being there always, and yet

never reached, till it churns us into elixir

 

of which only something of the immortal

already, that something that was before,

and if before, then somehow always too,

can ever partake, share, taste, and know?