Monday, May 29, 2006

MadisonAveWords

--Madison Ave--

Beautiful are:

Your blue eyes;
Two blinking seas of focus.

And
Truth.



Beautiful are:

Your strong steps;
Might lives in your stride.

And
Grace.


Exquisite are:

Your ideas;
They mingled with my mine on Madison Ave.
So that now,
I have

A memory

Of notions yours and notions mine
Stitched in New York winter time
‘Neath city lights—

December nights.

Some things stand out oh-so-bright!

I love to hear you think.

.MGW.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

QuixoticWords

--Quixotic--

Quixotic mind and starry-eye,
Idealistic will, romantic sigh;
Propose your color,
amber-gold,
Propose it to the morn.


Buoyant pulse, inventive tongue,
Naïve voice, refined and young;
Cast your shade,
a glowing pink,
Cast it to the noon.


Idyllic step, and tranquil soul,
Fiery heart, design meek-bold;
Let fly your hue,
a riotous red,
Let fly it in the night.


Churn cool stars and fuel hot flames,
Incite visions, enter games.
Don this blush,
a dappled burst,
Don it all your days.

.MGW.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

LibertadWords









--Libertad--

More freedom swims in the fastest mile
Than floats in the longest year.
When minds confine bold wings and choice
I find my free will here:

On gravel roads and ocean sands
And mountain paths long lost.
Recall do I my strength and voice;
This memory’s free of cost—

Unless you count the June sweat
And the muscles screaming slow.
And the out-of-breath and
Up-the-hill that lets you know you know

just

who

you are.

.MGW.

Monday, May 08, 2006

NYTimesWords

--> Dangling Particles
[Or, Why science writing is tough.]

Click:



.MGW.

Sunday, May 07, 2006

ElegyWords

Lengthy, but lovely to ponder:

"The First Duino Elegy"
by Rainer Maria Rilke

Who, though I cry aloud,
would hear me in the angel orders?
And should my plea ascend,
were I gathered to the glory
of some incandescent heart,
my own faint flame of being
would fail for the glare.
Beauty is as close to terror
as we can well endure.
Angels would not condescend
to damn our meagre souls.
That is why they awe
and why they terrify us so.
Every angel is terrible!
And so I constrain myself and
swallow the deep, dark music
of my own impassioned plea.
Oh, to whom can we turn
in the hour of need?
Neither angel nor man.
Even animals know that we
are not at home here.
We see so little of what
is clearly visible to them.
For us there is only
a tree on a hillside,
which we can memorize, or
yesterday's sidewalks, or
a habit which discovered us,
found us comfortable and moved in.
O and night...the night!
Wind of the infinite
blowing away all faces.
Within our solitude appears
a nearly lovely god
or goddess, all the
heart is ever apt to meet.
Lovers fare no better,
concealing, by their love,
each other's destiny.
Do you still not understand?
Pour your emptiness
into the breeze-
the birds may soar
more swiftly for it.

Yes, springtime needed you!
The very stars, row on row,
sparkled for your attention.
From bygone days a wave rolled
or a violin yielded itself as you
wandered by some open window.
These were your instructions.
But what could you do-
distracted, as you were,
by all of that significance?-
as though each signpost
pointed on beyond itself
towards something higher yet:
a mere prelude to The Beloved!
(Where would you find room to
keep such a one, in amongst
those vast, weird thoughts,
always coming and going,
often spending the night?)
Sing, in your lovelorn
longing, of the losers.
Make their dark fame glisten.
Sing of those whom you are
nearly moved to envy in the
purity of their despair:
hearts more loving in their pain
than many never broken.
Sing again-and yet again-
your altogether insufficient
praise of them.
The hero lives!
His ruin is but a pretext
to be born again.
Depleted Nature calls her lovers
back into her bosom, as though
she had not strength to fashion them anew.
Have you yet sung the bold grief
of Gaspara Stampa so poignently
that another girl, likewise spurned in love,
might be moved to similar transcending passion?
Is it not time these ancient seeds of pain
put forth a flower?...time that, lovingly,
we free ourselves from lovers?...
time we fit ourselves, quivering
like an arrow to its bowstring,
enduring tension with the prospect
of flight exceeding the limits of
the feathered shaft, the string,
the very bow which looses it?
Nowhere may we remain.

Voices, Voices!
Hear, my heart,
as only the holy hear,
lifted from Earth by
celestial command but
taking no notice, so
perfect is their listening.
You could not bear to hear
the voice of God.
Not that, no...
but perhaps attend
the ceaseless murmer of
silence: the vespers
of the untimely dead,
borne upon the wind...
the whispers of the
children who haunted
that cathedral in Naples-
the church in Rome...
the injunction discovered
on a tombstone last year at
Santa Maria Formosa.
All they ask:
"Weep no more for us!
Your tears muddy the
path of our ascent."

Strange to be no more of Earth.
To quit half learned habits.
To view roses and their kind
no more in human terms.
To be no more a babe in arms
that ever fear to drop you.
To leave the name you are
known by like a child leaves
a broken toy.
Strange to desire nothing.
Strange to watch the
known world dissolve.
Death is very difficult.
Lost time is painfully
reconstructed until the
struggle yields some
slight glimmer of eternity.
The living are mistaken
in their distinctions-
angels often do not know
whether they walk among
the quick or the dead.
So 'tis said.
The storm of eternity roars;
all voices drown in its thunder.

Children who have gone do not require us.
Weaned, they need no mother's breast.
Our joys and sorrows don't concern them.
But we, for whom the mysteries are golden,
still unsolved, our very sustenance-
can we exist without them?
Grief is our spirit's fodder.
Remember the Lament for Linos: how
the first shaft of song shot through
barren air carving a sudden vacuum
in the astonished space where
godlike youth forever vanished,
leaving only a melody, which is
our sole comfort and enchantment.

.MGW.

WildTypeWords




Wild-Type

“Wild-type,” she told him.
He didn’t understand.
He poured the wine and smiled at her
And reached out for her hand.

Her hand was tan and sun-kissed
From running on the beach.
Her skin was cool and lovely,
From sailing on dusk sea.

“The classic form of something,
As in nature it occurs.”
He laughed a bit and clamped his hand
Much harder upon hers.

“You know, like horses racing?
Or breezes full of hawk?
Like dancing in the thunder, or
Scaling steepest rock?”

The hawks he knew had cell phones;
His breezes were fast cars,
And when the thunder bellowed,
Inside, he watched the stars.

“Wild-type,” she told him.
“Come WITH me, see it real.”
The night was navy-blue and crickets
Clicked like roulette wheels.

A field is where she took him.
Orange lilies lay in wait.
An owl or two observed the pair;
A shadow watched their date.

“Dance with me?” she asked him.
“A wild-eyed, graceful waltz?”
He quipped: “No music have we.
How to keep the pulse?”

“The music’s in the moonlight.
Its metronome’s ideal!
The orchestra is whisper-led;
The dancefloor is grass-teal.”

He hesitated briefly,
And then he took her waist.
They danced in fields to rhythms
Wild-type, and perfect paced.

.MGW.

NinWords


My very favorite thought:

We do not grow absolutely, chronologically. We grow sometimes in one dimension, and not in another; unevenly. We grow partially. We are relative. We are mature in one realm, childish in another. The past, present, and future mingle and pull us backward, forward, or fix us in the present. We are made up of layers, cells, constellations.
-- Anais Nin



.MGW.

Saturday, May 06, 2006

BareWords




--Bare Bronze--

Bare bronze shoulder.
Dress bright white.
Breezy brown hair.
Night so right…

Night so right for
Fire-fly kisses,
Sand dune smiles,
And high-tide wishes.

Bare bronze shoulder.
Eyes bright blue.
Easy laughter.
Me and you…

Me and you and
Moonlight swimming
Long, light talks
And slow, deep listening.

Bare bronze shoulders.
Hearts bright thrilled.
Summer joined and
Souls fulfilled.

.MGW.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

MustWords

[An adaptation of John Mosefield's "Sea-Fever"]



I must go down to the seas again
For the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and clear call
That may not be denied.

I’ll sail down to the seas again
To that wild-hearted life
To the whale’s way and the gull’s way
Where the wind’s a whetted knife.

And I’ll wear summer stars in evening eyes
Drink sea breezes with lime
And cherish every sun-kissed step
Of a wave-licked summertime.

.MGW.

JuxtaposeWords

Madame, all stories, if continued far enough, end in death, and he is no true-story teller who would keep that from you.

--Ernest Hemingway


All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses, and to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.

--Walt Whitman, "Leaves of Grass"

.MGW.