Far off on
the island, out of town,
I pedalled
on a gravel path, passing by
an old,
restored house,
small,
simple, familiar in its Venetian style,
the plaster
a full red-brown
like the
texture of an oil painting,
you could
almost taste it
neat against
the quiet morning sky
with by it
the still green flame of a cypress.
Eternity
aside. Mose’s lit bush.
The poet
had come across
a miracle
like this,
a simple
settled light.
But, even
he then, had left
and
forgotten it.
Going into
the straight, absorbing
line of the
future, the illusion,
our
destiny.
I can’t do
anything better
except to
go back for an instant
to the
fullness of a pastel red-brown plaster
and the
fiery, airy green of a cypress
that
grabbed the wind with a firm fist
and swayed
an instant of eternity
into my
heart.
2 comments:
Going into the straight, absorbing
line of the future, the illusion,
our destiny.
This a particularly moving sequence in a very moving poem. One of your best, I think. The last stanza seems inspired.
I love those two lines that end with 'texture of an oil painting'. Smell, touch and taste - all there!
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