Something halts at the water’s edge,
Beyond which the lake is churned
Into aroused wisps of exalted mist,
While on the meadow running by the bank
Trees strain sudden sunlit alleyways
Trimmed with early morning shade,
Still holding their inlaid chill.
I know — must always have known —
That at cockcrow time itself
Quietly cracks,
And the countryside draws nearest
To some hallowed shrine
Meant somehow to persist
And ever abide,
Even if sealed away and lost
Amid the outer rush,
Like those last diminutive violets
I found there on the grassy shore:
So easy to miss in their modest
Yet immaculate harmonies,
Harmonies that flute marble temple columns
Just as surely as a lover’s wave-like knees.
Why, is there not in all this
An ever-welling presence,
Though often deeply hidden and locked —
A keening pre-sense
Behind the mind’s each living sense,
Or within every presence
For which we glibly borrow
Her own proper name?
Just as daybreak’s aquatic stillness
Cuts a marble statue-moment
Out of thought and time and space,
Staying what would otherwise flow away —
And just as waters embrace and fête
The sky above as the mien and métier
Fit to haeremai and cradle in their midst
What stuns and transcends their given selves.
So too this morning Hudson lake
And its magical ēlektron of sublime fifths —
One part silver and four of gold —
Shimmered with dots of milky light.
And then, upon the road back out of town,
Along Main Street, I passed the white church
Upon the little hill,
Shining like a fresh new page
In statu nascendi —
So pure, so naked,
Awaiting the illumined stillness
Of a coming verse.