On The Way To riverrun

Sleep

Take me to the deepest well that plumbs this land of Circadia, do not let me dwell on feeling, on the corporal sealing where I remember the dealings of my mortal day, the play is over and curtain drawn, the dawn has not yet made tomorrow, and it would be my greatest sorrow to miss a break before it comes, give me absence, make me numb to thoughts, the past keeps creeping like a spider in my ear, I fear to let it go, to know another type of life, and yet I want the little death so much, to flick it off with a single touch, I want no more of what I have, I will to see my sheep in bed and counted, I’m comforted by the feast of breaths I’ve mounted, this last one twice the length, a gift to take me out of conscious dreams something finally without a meaning, just a sensation void of me, some tea I had and drank the tone in, crickets sing and their direction I go in, what is the way, where is the location, it must be that anywhere but here is a vacation, another gasp of air I take, my body continues to wear and ache, how does one achieve relaxation, can one choose inaction or will I simply have to weight I formulate no comprehension of my current state, though once adrift I now awake and am more lucid than when I bake under the simmers of my glimmering fate, the clouds cannot cover up what has come to pass, the last heat warms me still and keeps me jazzed around the ticking clock I bought eleven hours for myself and walked the lonely streets I emptied myself and hoped it would steep me in a better time driven by a better hour to stir and rustle join the bustle beat the monkey off the back and buy a new soul off the rack get a discount cause I know the owner woman wash me gently in cold water press my mind like a new pair of slacks boarders strut the pleat and stay completed never need to see the cleaners the seamier things were never true, the red is gone and I hug the blue the black the night attack the darker spheres of influence, from duty’s worry I would be truent if I could just get comfy in these sheets I hate these robes of state that oblige me to linger in debate now or later aggregate my peace leaves me twitch my eyes release the tension doubled are my views on modern civilization a terrible trap salvation with a road map I’ll get their one of these days something smelled strong of paint and I feared that lead was in the air but now it is gone an aimless whips of effort the cold contemplation of the soldier on the blink of humanity can it be the wet will never stop the dry will always mop the land the sand will drop over my face and bring me out of the running race to the slower pace is my ambition anything but this burning condition where I know no off I cough out streams of stimulation schemes to make the next best creation that has ever seen the light of may I may never see the dark behind the fall the winter rest that call to all lay down your weariness believe in progress once more heave the chest and sail on distant seas buoyed by a lighter me a person free of anchored angst who knows well enough to give my thanks toss about in relative ease mind the queues and cross with “please” remember that it has all bin done untied in the not dew create some fun before the legend pointing up forgets to fill the languid cup with regrets and move away fly too south end swims on a bay froth at the mouth float like a thin read to be great a volume can slow you down the words have wait for me till the soil toils raise the heaven bars note the singing knot bee two long four eight I the latest buzz missed the won and an eye got stung on the mark set game of go corner white make it right a way that blood itself will pump the calm phenom lays the track over bumps jumps the three legged man stands the clock on barrowed time falls to six then builds to nine there will be no one and two isn’t going to happen until zero is something to hang a hat on a tree is a good sign that life is ahead brimming with felt emotions mold to shape the landscape instead is laid back to refresh the fertility thrust forward progress beyond recognition taste this condition let it go black the held contraction keeping reality in the fore position open to things closed to oblivion we go stretch out away from self feeling nothing touching no thing boarders unbound the essence of one is the same in the other across the line collapses sensation cessation ceases unity found true in me glue that binds forever together too gather to disperse then find a new stick with continuity holds everything in the palm of a hand has no grasp a finger makes a situation up rises until it drops down town where feathers fall from grace we embrace the love chase chaste white rays out from internal space we all sea bricks drips in the wall water world wavers hour needed bread giving thanks ewe muchly wool whirl lately stop nano second time coming slowly

 

Looking At

“What is it?” X asked the figure sitting on the stone block. Sai turned briefly to see who was asking the question, “It’s been awhile since we’ve spoken.” X sat down without comment, transfixed by the view, “What is it?”

They looked at it together for a moment. “The future,” Sai replied. X squirmed unconsciously on the hard seat, “It’s amazing.” “Yeah,” agreed Sai.

X stared at the swirling future ahead and then snapped to Sai quickly, “Have you been able to see this the whole time?” “Yeah,” Sai answered quietly.

“Why did you never tell me?” X asked, a little hurt. “I did,” Sai replied, “Everything I said, everything I’ve done, was because of this.” “But you were standing in front of it,” X protested, “I couldn’t see it.” Sai stared at the future as the memories of the past came up. “The seat was always here. A step to either side of me and you would have seen it.”

X’s hands came up to cover X’s face. This was what X had been longing for—for as long as could be remembered. “You could have just said–” but X dropped the thought. “Everything happens at the right time,” sighed Sai.

“What do we do now?” asked X. “What do you mean?” asked Sai. “I mean we’ve seen it. It’s beautiful and it’s profound. We have to do something. We have to tell the others.”

“Do you think they’ll understand?” asked Sai unenthused. “They have to!” jumped X, “It would change everything, solve all problems. To know that it ends like this, well, what worries could exist?” Sai continued to stare into the future, “You didn’t understand.”

“But I get it now, I get it.” Sai looked calmly over at X, so young and brave. “It’s a tough direction to go,” Sai told him, “You would have to walk away from the future.”

“I can’t leave them all behind. It isn’t right. I have to tell them.”

“Everyone gets here in their own time,” and Sai relaxed on the stone block.

X scowled briefly. “I’m going back,” X declared, “I’m going to tell them about how great it is, how they don’t need to worry, that’s it’s going to be all right in the end.”

“That about sums it up,” Sai concurred. “It’s the perfect conclusion.”

“Come with me,” X said earnestly, “Two of us will convince them for sure.”

Sai kept staring ahead peacefully, “No.”

“Don’t you know what it’s like back there?” X asked anxiously.

“If I want to go back there,” Sai replied, “I’ll head that way,” and Sai pointed at the future.

“I don’t understand,” stated X stepping towards Sai.

“After that, it begins again. And we are all that is in between.”

X sat on the stone with Sai. They both looked at the future. “Then I’ll go ahead, and go back, and I’ll tell them all about it.”

“I know you will,” smiled Sai, “and I know I’ll see you here again someday.” They gave each other a knowing look, and with a sad resignation they hugged with love in their hearts. X stood with determination and slowly walked forward to the future that lay ahead. Sai waved goodbye, understanding everyones’ pain and seeing what great days they truly were through the lens of the end.

Dinner on Faith

The birds chirped as they flew across the backdrop of a perfect sky.  Beneath them snaked a deep and mighty river, roaring with the lifeblood of the Earth.  From the thrumming swarm of their flock, two of the avians separated and perched on an old girder bridge, cooing in the cool breeze of the day.  They were an odd pair to behold.  The one moved its head as if listening succinctly to every sound as it happened.  The other kept its head still, as if staring straight at the Sun.  Then, what would have seemed unexpected to an outside observer, one of the birds flew away.

Susan and Mark strolled onto the bridge that fine spring day, their shoes causing light tingings to ring through the air.  They made eye contact and smiled glowingly, reveling in their stunning romance.  It had only been three months, three months and forever, since that day in the park where their lives first intertwined.  Susan was crying, and Mark, of all the passersby, stopped and offered his sleeve.  That morning was the day Susan left her church, and she needed a sleeve.

Susan had decided she could no longer keep going, keep on living as she had been.  It had been a lifetime of commitment and attendance, and her priest was adamant that she not leave her church.  “Keep your faith!” he pleaded, but it only nettled her sensitivity, for there laid her issue.  Faith.  She could not keep what was not there already.  She was not sure, she had long been unsure, that there was a God.  At church, faith beamed so perfectly, so honestly on everyone’s face.  Everyone looked up and they connected to something.  Susan looked up, and she too made that face, knowing the shape of every muscle, able to produce it at will in the mirror; but underneath that clever facade she felt deserted in the crowd, as if she were the only lamb who couldn’t see the Sun.  “Perhaps there is no Sun to see.”  She was alone.  It tortured her and she fled.

“Mark.”

“Yes, dear?” he asked, taking her hand with interest.

“I think I’ve found my faith.”

“Oh. Hmm. Really?” he mused, looking carelessly down through the grating of the bridge.

It was an old girder bridge, once popular as a route for the rolling throngs of carts and horses, but now only haunted by strolling pedestrians.  Built during the great age of steam boats by strong and dirty hands, the bridge arched high over the river so to give plenty of leeway to the once passing stacks of iron that unapologetically bellowed smoke over any unfortunate agent of commerce who happened to be standing on the grating that towered above the churning water below.  Ships of size and note no longer navigated these waters, and the bridge’s august height, like its presence, no longer served a purpose.  In the big, modern world, it was a little thing.

“It’s about faith in the little things, Mark,” she glimmered.  “It’s like – like this bridge.  I have faith in the people who made it.  All of them must be gone by now, but I have faith in their work.  I have faith that, despite its age, it won’t break beneath me.  I am without worry!”

They stopped to look out over the river, breathing in the glory of the day.  Small boats jetted along the water.  The trees on the banks waved happily in the breeze.  They saw two birds break away from a migrating flock and perch on the highest girder.  Susan savored the freedom she felt, and noticed appreciatively the Sun’s rippling reflection in the water.  Mark stamped his foot on the metal walk, echoing a metallic knell.

“There’s no doubt about it.  It’s sturdy,” Mark assured.  “Is that really the faith you were having problems with?”

“I don’t know,” she considered, and then smiled.  “It’s a start.”

He grinned in his way, digging his bottom lip up into his teeth.  “But it’s not much of a stretch.”

It was not a lover’s quarrel.  They often talked like this, and Susan knew that Mark’s honest deliberations had already helped her very much.  He was not, nor had ever been, a churchgoer.  His perspectives were fresh to her.  On his own, he was a confident person, and confidence was a trait Susan admired deeply.  He was always steadfast.  Always reliable.  Always there.  In a way, he was her hero, and she always pined to know what he was thinking and how his mind worked.  “Then where do you think my problem with faith lies?”

He started to walk them on as he spoke, “With less tangible things.  You said you left your church because you weren’t sure anymore that there was a God.  It wasn’t the people, or the ritual, or the activities.  They were there and real.  You said you had no faith because He wasn’t real to you, because you couldn’t feel Him.”

“Yes, I’m unsure,” she reconfessed.  “That’s why this bridge is so important to me.  It is firm and real.  I’m completely sure of it. I know what it feels to have complete faith!”

Mark smiled again in his way, “But it isn’t much of a stretch.”

“Then what are you proposing?”

“Faith is power, Sue,” he said, stopping their walk again.  “You believe in something and it’s real.  You believe in this bridge, and so it is.  You believe it will keep you from falling, and it will.  Your problem isn’t with God, it’s with faith.  You don’t believe in anything unless it is already sure for you, unless someone has already put it there for you to believe.”

She digested his words and their gravity.  No longer did she feel the good sensations the bridge first gave her.  She wished she could have reveled in the mood longer, ‘but Mark is only trying to help,’ she thought and understood.  “I guess you’re right, dear,” she conceded, but she no longer desired to talk about it, to ruin the day any further with unpleasantness, and moved to close that conversation.  

“Something to work on,” she declared.

He took her hand and held it.  “Are we meeting for dinner tomorrow?”

She was happy again.  “Of course, dear.  That would be nice.  Where should we go?”

“I was thinking about that Italian place near your apartment, the one you keep talking about.”

“Oh, yes!  I can’t imagine why we haven’t gone there yet.  You’ll absolutely love it!”

“I bet I will.”

“It’s really fancy.”  She poked him, “You’ll have to wear a tie.  Ooh, and I’ll wear my red dress!”

He laughed at her enthusiasm and breathed a pleasant sigh. “So,” he grinned, “You are sure we’ll meet tomorrow?  No doubts?”

She smiled, “I have complete faith!”

He looked down through the grate and then back into her eyes.  “Don’t lose your faith.”  And with those peaceful words, he turned and climbed up the railing.

“Mark?” she asked with a cheery unease.  “What are you doing?”

Stepping down onto the ledge he looked with love into her eyes and smiled, his lip digging up into his teeth.  “Don’t lose your faith.”  And with those words he stepped back and off the bridge.

A bird moved its head as it heard the wind suck out of Susan’s lungs.

She grabbed at him in desperation, her chest tight and unable to release her screams.  She watched in horror as his clothes rippled and his limbs hung helplessly in space.  Her neck twitched painfully as she saw his body splash violently into the waters below.  Her skin burned with shock.  Her ribs collapsed with disbelief.  “My God!”  She huffed, fear condensating in her breath.  Seconds passed as a searing headache lashed over her.  Then her thoughts were voided.  Tears welled up.  Logic fell from her lips.  “He’ll resurface – he’ll swim to shore – just watch for him to surface.”  She stared.  Seconds passed.  The waters roared on.  No one came up.  Her breathing heaved as she made deals with something unknown.  “Have faith … and he’ll resurface.  Have faith … and he’ll come up!  Have faith!  Faith!  FAITH!  Faith!  Faith.”  She sat on the bridge, her fingers clutching through the gaps.  “Have faith.”  Minutes passed.  He did not come up.

She lay on the bridge, sobbing from the deepest parts of her soul.  She was nauseous and lost to any choice, any direction, any will to go on.  It all seemed so final and horrible, tragic and inescapable, forsaken and hopeless.  But in the roar of the water and the flaps of a bird’s wings, she could hear the echoes of her lover’s questions, “You are sure we’ll meet tomorrow?  No doubts?”

“I have complete faith!”  She remembered, and slowly, bravely stood herself up.

“Don’t lose your faith.”  And she walked on.  Alone.

Poem’s Purpose

What is Poem’s purpose? And on this Earth is…
It to show that “wonderful things” can induce favorable emotions?
Emotions into a world that is… neutral?
How do I communicate this? Show what is fruitful?
These shadows of Mary I lead as my focus:
I start with the imagery somewhat ambiguous
Then to journey from fog into things that are clear to us
So I can finally share and describe for you this thing called the “Isness”.
Isness—existence without appreciation.
Then to interject this fine woman from whom blooms adoration
And begin my long tale, a search to find explanation
So I can express myself simply again.
Again! Again without End!
Where did I go wrong?
This sounds like some story I’ve read from before!
Some song that I sang long ago!
Some headache that pounds with monotonous sounds…
Or a question I asked of the Poem.
Oh? The poem. I should go on-
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On the Salisbury Plain,
A dim bright field,
Mud damp from the rain
Flowed the image, a jacket,
Of leather, brown stained.
And my poem still sounds too refrained…
But I was charmed by that girl for the first time that day.
I saw meaning in the Isness, color in the grey!
I saw vast possibility without tired eyes!
I knew endless romance! without knowing why.
But on London streets
Things just are.
Generations walk beat
Joyful words obsolete
And we don’t see the light at our feet.
“A lovely quagmire,”
She said, and her magic, her show, I also do know:
Define and Inspire
This world of the blackness…
Until my desire falls and I slip to the void, so tragic, like so many times before-
Why let it?
Why let it? Why not imagine large towers, not caverns,
And let fairy tales play from here to the Heavens
And let all of life run as smooth as the occasion
When I was charmed by that girl over tea and billiard green
At the place where philosophies twined deep in between
Meeting in light levity,
To where our last kiss, an Underground scene,
Would be set up, became destined to be,
And I knew for the first time that someday I’d see:
A day not yet had from times still fully not known,
An instance where no one will feel all alone,
A second where the past and future will meet,
A point where the meaning will clearly be seen,
A place I’ll be expressed and experienced by…
Me.

Relevant

And tomorrow came.
For some, it is a fortunate occurrence,
For they never are complacent in expectations.
For others, it is a welcomed friend
Trusting its ever lasting place in their heart.
Neither is the smarter,
For we except that both have arrived at the land of opportunity,
The day.

Time is irrelevant,
For what have we created in our own lives but love,
Love magnificent, love divine, love eternal;
Until our heart is filled so much with love
That our mortal conscience cannot comprehend
That it may exist all at once.
So we pick, and we choose,
And open ourselves to the manifestation of the physical:
When love creates it.
What does it matter that the rooster crows?
What does anything matter except that love that sits before you?

So I love thee passionately!
Sitting here is my only purpose, my single muse,
So that I may know myself through you alone.
Be no words necessary for I feel it too.
All melts away, and we are left to our own pleasures for eternity.
Our love exists.

Yet, also existing is a different love.
For as much as I love thee also exists my love in others,
So that I might know myself through them in another way.
And to my ultimate regret,
I have not been able to make all these loves happen at once.
I need to experience myself in different ways,
And for that reason I have submitted to time,
The organizer of my love,
Making it very relevant.

For some, time is allowed to choose their love,
For they cannot pick which love is the highest.
For others, they create when love will manifest,
Longing for whatever muse feels the best.
Neither is the smarter,
And the wisest of our race have known both,
Putting trust that love is always there,
And the highest is right now.