12/31/15

PARABLE OF FAITH - Louise Glück

Now, in twilight, on the palace steps
the king asks forgiveness of his lady.

He is not
duplicitous; he has tried to be
true to the moment; is there another way of being
true to the self?

The lady
hides her face, somewhat
assisted by the shadows. She weeps
for her past; when one has a secret life,
one's tears are never explained.

Yet gladly would the king bear
the grief of his lady: his
is the generous heart,
in pain as in joy.

Do you know
what forgiveness means? It means
the world has sinned, the world
must be pardoned—

"A man saw a ball of gold in the sky;" - Stephen Crane

A man saw a ball of gold in the sky;
He climbed for it,
And eventually he achieved it—
It was clay.

Now this is the strange part:
When the man went to the earth
And looked again,
Lo, there was the ball of gold.
Now this is the strange part:
It was a ball of gold.
Aye, by the heavens, it was a ball of gold.

A Simple Story - Gwen Harwood

A visiting conductor
     when I was seventeen,
took me back to his hotel room
     to cover the music scene.

I'd written a composition.
     Would wonders never cease –
here was a real musician
     prepared to hold my piece.

He spread my score on the counterpane
     with classic casualness,
and put one hand on the manuscript
     and the other down my dress.

It was hot as hell in The Windsor.
     I said I'd like a drink.
We talked across gin and grapefruit,
     and I heard the ice go clink

as I gazed at the lofty forehead
     of one who led the band,
and guessed at the hoarded sorrows
     no wife could understand.

I dreamed of a soaring passion
     as an egg might dream of flight,
while he read my crude sonata.
     If he'd said, ‘That bar's not right,’

or, ‘Have you thought of a coda?’
     or, ‘Watch that first repeat,’
or, ‘Modulate to the dominant’
     he'd have had me at his feet.

But he shuffled it all together,
     and said, ‘That's lovely, dear,’
as he put it down on the washstand
     in a way that made it clear

that I was no composer.
     And being young and vain,
removed my lovely body
     from one who'd scorned my brain.

I swept off like Miss Virtue
     down dusty Roma Street,
and heard the goods trains whistle
     WHO? WHOOOOOO? in aching heat.

"Living on hope is like being locked in a prison cell and the sun is shining so brightly through the window that your eyes become blind to the bars." - Henry Rollins

Living on hope is like being locked in a prison cell and the sun is
shining so brightly through the window that your eyes become blind
to the bars. As soon as you're blind and drunk on hope, they gotcha.

12/30/15

For a Senior Killed on Prom Night - Gail White

It's useless to pretend you would have been
a genius. I taught you and I know.
You made the team, but others made it win.
A ready smile made up for being slow.

You'd have been ordinary in the end:
the hardest worker someone ever had,
one woman's husband and one man's best friend,
recipient of cards for "world's best dad."

So why, where you'd have been, is there a blank
so huge, a hole where all thoughts go to die?
The world has only lost one of its rank
and file. You didn't even make me cry.

Why do I go outside at one a.m.
and search the stars as though I'd numbered them?

Telemachus' Kindness - Louise Glück

When I was younger I felt
sorry for myself
compulsively; in practical terms,
I had no father; my mother
lived at her loom hypothesizing
her husband's erotic life; gradually
I realized no child on that island had
a different story; my trials
were the general rule, common
to all of us, a bond
among us, therefore
with humanity: what
a life my mother had, without
compassion for my father's
suffering, for a soul
ardent by nature, thus
ravaged by choice, nor had my father
any sense of her courage, subtly
expressed as inaction, being
himself prone to dramatizing,
to acting out: I found
I could share these perceptions
with my closest friends, as they shared
theirs with me, to test them,
to refine them: as a grown man
I can look at my parents
impartially and pity them both: I hope
always to be able to pity them.