Sunday, January 4, 2026

 

TO LONGFELLOW

  

There was a time when poetry was found

Throughout this land, in parlors far and wide,

And actually was read; while side by side

Sat families and friends all gathered round

To hear your words. This practice was held sound,

Not an anomaly, as ‘tis today--

For the electric image now holds sway,

And poetry lies crippled on the ground.

 

Return to us, O Longfellow, to teach

Once more the liberal arts in our sad schools,

Where poetry is gibberish or trite!

You showed us that the Old World’s cultured rules

Can be applied to us afresh, despite

Our quest for novelties beyond our reach.

Sunday, December 28, 2025

 

 

METAPHYSICALLY FIT

  

Around and round the Mall they go;

And when they stop, nobody knows.

 

In groups of two or three or four

They power walk the shopping floors--

 

Or so they think.  If I should speak,

I’d tell them that they’ve sprung a leak!

 

Their energy is spurting out,

Like oil from some burst tanker’s spout.

 

They walk to keep themselves in shape;

To do so they must concentrate

 

Upon a fixed idea of How

And Who they are. So like a plow

 

Each one strides briskly, cutting through

Us loiterers, to pay their dues.

 

I may not know as much as they,

But I can waste a better day

 

Just strolling the world’s Mall at large,

Shoplifting visions free of charge.

 

My technique ain’t no hocus pocus:

They are simply much too focused,

 

Blinded to the merchandise

I pick and choose from at a price

 

That all of them refuse to pay:

The loss of speed! A fair exchange,

 

To swap their warped mentalities

For wellness such as I conceive--

 

Considering the benefits

Of being metaphysically fit.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

 

THE INCARNATION

  

One evening as I sat home by the fire,

The winter solstice circled in the dark

About the house. I felt it through the walls—

The dimly lit walls flickering like my heart.

 

It seemed to me I was an amputee

Home from the war, shell shocked and traumatized,

My face disfigured and my mind impaired.

 

All of a sudden I was known by God,

Who had become me in my misery

And taken on himself my guilt and fear—

Before my embryo had been conceived,

Before the universe had been revealed.

 

And I, transfigured though as yet unhealed,

Was blessed in what was once my blind despair.

Sunday, December 14, 2025

 

          ENSEMBLE GALILEI

 

The Celtic Harp and Fiddle seize the day

With Scottish and Uillean Pipes and Flute,

The Viola da Gamba and Oboe,--

All intertwined to fill Saint John’s Great Hall,

Therein to celebrate the thirteenth time

The Winter Solstice with their Christmas cheer.

A seasoned Voice from Public Radio

Is instrumental also, joined with these,

And reads Jack London and Kieran O’Hare.

The Music and the Words together bring

Each other such communion of glad life,

That even the One Hundred Books receive    `

The Spirit, and come tripping off their shelves!

As Kant with Hegel, Twain with Plato dance,

The February Swans and Easter Snow

Loom through the ancient windows. Sunset yields

Its influence while Heaven and Nature sing.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

 

PREMIERE SNOWMAN

  

Before the universe was born

Out of the mind of man;

Before mankind was self-deformed

By his own grasping hands;

 

Far stretching through the wilderness

The snow lay on the ground,

So dense within the forest depths

No food could there be found.

 

The birds and deer grew small and thin

For hunger in those woods;

The wolves and owls were languishing

For prey to feed upon.

 

So faint were all the animals,

So weakened and so chilled,

That they were inconsolable

And slept to ease their ills.

 

Then night came on, and with it wind

That shivered all the trees,

And scattered falling branches in

The drifts that lay beneath.

 

It was as though the wind itself

Had feet and hands and arms,

The way it pushed the snow about

And shaped it to a form

 

No animal before had known,

Or dreamt of in its sleep.

What we would call a Snowman rose

Upon the hoary deep,

 

And sparkled in the morning sun

Before the startled eyes

Of elk and squirrels and chipmunks,

That fled from it to hide.

 

But as the day grew bright with dawn,

The Snowman did appear

As shelter from the wintry blast,

And beast and fowl drew near,

 

To be protected from the threat

Of bitter cold and sleet;

And on the icy ground was spread

Each day an endless feast

 

Of seeds and nuts and roots and leaves,

Green grass that they might find

As on the meadows that would teem          

When summer was so kind.

 

The predators no more did slay

For food, but ate the meal

Provided for their former prey,

Their kinship now revealed.

 

All through the stormy season’s throes

They fed this shrine before,

Till spring dissolved the man of snow

And offered them its store.

 

This legend you have now been told,

Of how things took their course

Before the world was bought and sold,

And took a turn for worse.

Sunday, November 30, 2025

 

     THE NATURAL BRIDGE

  

A stony arch of faces almost glimpsed;

An unwound scroll of writing almost read:

What bodies interwoven through the stone

That snow and rain dissolve and penetrate

With the carbonic acid of decay!

It seems to be unmoving, yet it flows

Untrammeled as the lacy waterfall

That cascades into foam on Cedar Creek—

Each bubble comprehending in itself

The unhewn bridge, the tourists, even you,

Who contemplate the nature of the mind.

Unconscious forces shape these primal forms,

This sculpture of the universe; this door

Swings open from the sky to let the gods

Pass in and out of man’s world as they will.

 

When Jefferson got down on hands and knees,

And crawled toward its precipice to view

The canyon from above, a violent pain

Coursed through his head after a moment passed;

And he shrank back before the great abyss.

Today a wooden fence would shield his sight,

For now the highway dominates the crest—

And what was once conceived in Liberty

Has paved the way to every sacred place,

And posted signs to advertise their worth.

 

At evening, when the gorge is dark enough,

The flood lights hidden in the clefts and trees

Illuminate the arch with colored rays,

As orchestration and the Lord’s Prayer swell

The night air with a paean to the God’s work

Of Biblical creation, when the world

Unfolded from His mind in seven days—

The very world the Human mind creates

In the mere instant that it takes to see

This awesome vision of Eternity.

But they who cannot focus long enough

With their own eyes and minds upon the show,

Distract the rest with flashing cameras

And digital reviews on tiny screens.

 

The Indians once worshipped here, though what

And how, it is now hard to ascertain—

Especially for people so abstract

And alienated from their origins

As those who overran this hallowed place,

And conquered the New World. The natives’ soul

Was one with this America, and served

No God commanding conquest in his name,

No lust for separate and immortal Self.

Imagination beamed the mountains forth;

The sunlight from the prehistoric dawn;

The hibernating bear and running deer;

The virgin forests vast and unsurveyed;

The waters so immaculate and pure:

A vision was this Earth itself to those

Whom we have named Native Americans.

 

Geology, which Jefferson contemned,

Has traced the evolution of this bridge

From Cedar Creek, which burrowed underground

And formed a tunnel several miles in length

Along its present bed. But piece by piece,

Its roof caved in; and at the present day

All that remains of it is this same Arch

Which one day will collapse in its own turn.

 

One stands beneath the groin of the bridge

Upon the walkway that bestrides the creek,

And feels a pleasant draft between the stream

And parapet where Jefferson stared down.

The eighteen-year-old Washington took hold

Of this behemoth, and climbed up its side

Until he got a foothold; then he carved

His own initials in the ancient rock

He should have worshipped as the face of God.

 

The rainbow trout and carp float through the creek,

And heron stalk the waters in a trance.

In clefts above, the doves are murmuring

What doves have murmured for a million years.

 

Beside the stairs that follow Cascade Creek

Downhill toward the bridge, in death there leans

A tree, an ancient arbor vitae, thought

To be the largest and the oldest such

Existing in the world. These trees increase

About an inch each thirty years in width,

And this one spans in inches fifty-six.

It seems to have a withered, weathered face

Turned backwards into time, away from me;

Away from all who toward its secrets pry.

 

A slave named Patrick Henry had a house

Upon these grounds; caretaker of the bridge

His master purchased from King George the Third,

Before the war was waged that would affirm

The rights that Man by Nature did possess,

Except in certain cases.

                                       In the days

When this estate became another’s right,

The tourists gathered in a metal cage,

And, lowered from the summit of the bridge,

Were serenaded by the violin.

 

What Declarations here stand on display

In this occult and wondrous archives

Smoothed over by the tufa oozing through

The limestone! Every rain that falls prepares

This dissolution of this edifice, and strains

Carbon dioxide from the plants’ decay,

Which forms the acid that erodes the arch,

Creating portraits faced the other way

Like paintings turned against the stony wall,

And hieroglyphics of forgotten ways.

 

Whose faces are they? What is written there?

Sometimes I think I see you, and myself.

No one who sees these patterns should conceal

The truth from people who cannot conceive

Their own Mind otherwise than to be owned,

Exploited and developed, mass produced—

Who would consume their birthright piece by piece,

Exploring Nature’s passageways to mine

The Rock of Ages for its fossil fuel.

For them has been erected, on the crest

Of one nearby and lonely little hill,

A Stonehenge replica of Styrofoam,

Spray painted gray and shaped, they say, to scale;

Upon which idle vandals scratch their names

With sharp stones while the Blue Ridge fades in mist.

 

Whoever carves his name upon this bridge

Is guaranteed to turn a blinded eye

Upon what man’s device cannot create—

What looms like Eden’s gate behind their backs! 

Meanwhile, the faces and the writing call

Contemplatives to that Eternity

Which never leaves us, which we never leave,

As long as like the Indians who dwelt

Here, we respect the spirit forms,

And scratch our villages upon the Earth

So that we leave no trace when we are gone,

Except perhaps for fossil prints and bone,

Above the caverns that one day shall fall

Along with this great monument,-- this bridge

Which spans between us and our origin:

Behold it now, as, lonely and unborn,

It rises from the mists of consciousness.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

 

CHILD OF GOD

  

“O Jesus, Lord Jesus,

Be with me today,

And comfort and guide me

So I may not stray.”

 

The prayer of the child

Reached the ears of the Lord,

Who came down from Heaven

As good as His Word.

 

The boy went to church

And held Jesus’ hand;

And after the service

The deacon, a man

 

Whom everyone trusted,

Asked him to stay

And help with the cleaning--

We left him that day.

 

But three years later

He broke down and cried,

And told us what happened

The day Jesus died.

  TO LONGFELLOW     There was a time when poetry was found Throughout this land, in parlors far and wide, And actually was read; whi...