Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Of the Art That Draws a Soul Out to Her Cleansing Breath (Or on Deciduous Existence)

 

Leaf by leaf, shade by shade.

 

Surely, the ancients held

that Hades, the world’s

great hollow of no return,

is an ekklēsiá or qahal

 

where shades, slid off light

like passé skins of snakes,

are called and congregate,

and those joyless shades

 

from whom all sense fled

were human souls

seized and delivered

as game to death

 

in which “all is vain” —

as complete, chronic slaves

to the Lord who’s himself

a Shade of Every Shade —

 

hence a dark and timeless secret:

to enslave a human, bestowed

even with a divine soul,

slice his seeing light

 

to a thin and narrow shade —

small-minded as can be,

and, as Socrates says

in the final book of the Republic,

 

tyrannies are found

at the distance

of trice-scaled

and cut-down shades —

 

shades of shades of shades

and hence as space shrunk

to a speck or spot,

a figure of a triple death —

 

or death bloated in reverse,

from a point to complete space,

a lethal latch of deadness

that paints as Hegel did his “cows”—

 

black on black in black

where only an owl of a goddess

knows, seeing through

the torn-up spirits’ dismal end.

 

And between Sheol and Teufel

Shadday is the Lord,

The Cleaver of the Presence

into what is not,

 

darkness bred with void.

And there is thus also double art —

tracing of a likeness’ semblance,

one that casts and copies

 

dies of vicious, soulless death

through its spells and shades

and the other—as beauty drawn

like a figure to its sublime breath.

Monday, June 29, 2026

At a Little Town Square and Café Outside an Unmoving Cathedral

 

Skin to skin,
Sky to sky—

What else are we mortals,
If we all came from stars?

Then what guilt
In lingering
Over coffee
And a glass of sweet water,

Watching the sunrise
Awaken
The cathedral's great rosette—

Its darkened blues,
Violets,
And reds
Catching the first enlivening light.

And slowly
One begins to understand,

Becoming oneself
Rounded within those eyes,

How patiently
All such towns
Have sought
To net
And square
The orb of a gyrating sun.

Where the Light Descends Though Still Staying Transparent

 

On the coral reef,
Clothed in clear waves,
In blues and greens
And endless shades,

Myriads of floral lips
Have found a place to bloom
Amid the rocks and crevices,
Offering one another

As finely tuned instruments
To the descending light
In its constant,
Glinting play.

And in that shared dream
One can no longer tell
Souls
From watchful silhouettes.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Of That Evergreen Played Between the Clouds and Pines

 

Though the mountains lie far
From these Carolina plains,
White clouds, their loosened swirls,
Accost the tall and swaying pines
With such shape and grace,
Pressing downward,
As though in longing.

As if that silent beauty from above
Yearned to be held—
Held and stirred
By that coniferous hairbrush—
That it might release
An outpouring of rain’s crystalline lines

Upon those teasels
Teasing at its cloth and scarf,
Falling at last
Upon such resin-soft,
oil-painted wood.

Shortly after Six O'Clock After the Solstice by the Pool


Heraclitus, “the Dark One,”
Faulted water,
Reproaching it
For the soul’s death.

But who besides water,
When perfectly still,
Seizes and paints
The shades so well?

And yet how little time
We have down here,
In this moving world,

To see and contemplate
What water can reflect
Of a sunrise orange burst.