Poem of heaven and Earth
THE STARS:
The dyad of agonal dawn-
Beyond the peace of dusk
Where hang the trellises of
Constellations- there is the
Square motion of lifting flags
The accelerating billow in
The interstellar clouds- as
If the the lifting of wings- the
Sussura of all angelic beings
In crowded assembly- the
World and the “ten thousand
Things” they are all drifting–
They are the world in many
Blossomings of shape- and
They are hanging on an easel,
In a background–
Receding, all strokes
suggesting–
There is another easel
behind it–
And this is the one onto which
All time is bleeding,
Into a single painting
Severed beyond our
Eye's seeing; all of
The moments which were
Lost; they hang
Amidst the cotton fields
And yeast of Stars. Wreathing
And saturating all the
Oort clouds - - oh how
Their volume hangs;
Against the dark–
Annointing them and
Staining them– in hues
Of Stanton Macdonald
Airplane Synchronmy in
Yellow Orange they
Swim across; our
Bluest veil– our sky -
UNDER THE STARS
What are we to do- we who
Cannot see them? Tragedy
Of birth
Beneath all of this we are trapped
On the collapsed
Pillars- foundations OF raptured
And Dying - EARTH, and must
Be trapped here all ways. As in
Cask of Amonticello. And so
On the fissile shaped missile; earth
We scream tragically- across
The sky and in Jejune autumns
Of our universal death
The martyrs advertise- in Halle
Boppe comets- the only easy
Ticket– off this unprime real estate
And for moments we can cross
In the Autumns of Jacob Zoet
Or in the God of Small Things-
Bevy our soul across the veil
Beyond this earth– in text just
For a minute. And for a minute
The soul may seclusively
traipse itself
In the papery taste of
Books, like the papery
Taste of Locusts from
Which John the Baptist
Drew sustenance.
And all this reminds;
That in this dark wood we are
Entering, there must always be
The Crocus of remembering
And ammonia of forgetting.
And all this must be why,
Must be- -
Why, Sophocles must
Make Oedipus blind
Itt must be why
Gilgamesh must die.
It is why, though it is
A Tragedy, for others
To be blind – it a blessing
To the poet. For since Homer's day
We spend our being calling upon the
"Wine-dark sea" making
Efforts not to witness
The sea's shimmering blue
Evaporation of resistance
For us there must be hope in high heavens-
But here upon earth, there is
Only work of
Bedlam
And there is no silver trumpet
Of angels- lovingly arched, there
Is only, to play the tunes-
Of all the aching and
Of all the wistful hearts
The tin whistle- and the
Blues harp
With which can idle
Away– the mystery
Caught here– upon the earth
As the tilting foundation plummets
The fingers of the lovers clutched
At the summit
May share only the mingling
Resistance
Of bitter distant numbness
WE ON THE EARTH:
In spring the heavy weight of all
This tragedy is falling
But with nothing to feel its weight
Either it effects it is lightly as two
Snowflakes upon a tongue.
And reels, and so there is
Nothing to stop us– from seeing
The falling of Helicopter seeds
Dancing like spinning Sufi's,
Apart all our questions –
In helical symmetries.
And so all spring rephrases
The daring question:
Not now, not now-
"Do I dare disturb the
Universe"
But do we dare rehearse-
Our existence,
with bliss
Still with hope–
In a universe too big
To be disturbed by
The human comprehension