Sunday, June 21, 2026

A Parable of the Regal Peacock and the Plebeian Rice

 

Among all the leaves and stalks of rice,
How can one endure
The countless promises
Of such sweet and gentle white?

 And even more—

If one is a lone peacock,
Suddenly wandering lost
Through this vast, oceanic awe,

Running and rustling
With the breeze—

And still more,
If that peacock
Once had been a mighty king,

Now burdened
With a long and luxuriant tail
That impedes both step and flight.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

“Why Bother about the Form of the Good? Let's Go for the Good Itself,” a Left-Hegelian Professor Said in Response To My Budding Platonism Years Ago

 

When the restless afternoon
Begins to break into evening dusk,

Surely somewhere in some far-flung town,
Along some back-street way,

A blonde woman always appears,

Neither young nor old,
Yet brazen enough, as suits her kind—

Neither clothed too much
Nor—yet—in the buff,

But, in a strangely timeless act,
Pressing forward

A piercing point,
A silent riot,

By which she ratifies anew

An old philosopher’s teaching
About geometry,

Which dares to reveal
So much of what otherwise remains unseen,

And the need
For a well-bound form—

How easily, without it,
Even the good

May become,
For many,

What Set’s gift became
To Osiris—

A finely measured,
Ajar tomb.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

To Those Who, Breath on Breath, Try to Read Each Other’s Hearts

 

Over the boardwalk

in curves descending

down to the river

that hugs its islands like a cape,

 

trees arch and bend,

subduing breeze

in a tight embrace.

There when you enter

 

the hush of that long arcade,

you begin to step

deeper and deeper

where green is all,

 

darkly in green stained—

the air, the scents, the shade,

and even breath—

even breath,

 

one that, ripening in rapture, bliss,

is at once both young and enough old

to gladly ride and read

where that frieze may run

 

by leading hearts

hitherto unsung

or unnamed,

its chosen kin

with its woos

and hallowed vows.