Monday, December 2, 2013
Finals
Here we are again. Gray clouds nearly touch the tips of mountains capped with snow for a month now. The twilight between fall and winter is nearly over. Soon it will snow. Final papers ring our minds; the mountains ring our valley. Gray clouds cover both. We are trapped in a limbo, in between our efforts and our future grades. The clouds of unknowing fall, perhaps will always fall, over our little undergraduate minds. But sempere aude--dare to know! As much as we can. These are the times that try men's souls, but these are the best of times. Write what you know, they say. But still we must know more, and so we write in order to find out. Isn't that why we sit in libraries? Papers, exams, brought to earth, distilled out of the sun above the overhanging clouds. We will leave our valley into the light one day, although perhaps it is not this day. But we will get there, finally.
Monday, March 25, 2013
How to say it
You could say simply, in reference to the arial ballet of a stunt pilot, that he flew. Or, in the words of Annie Dillard, you could say this:
"He piled loops in heaps and praised height. He unrolled the scroll of the air, extended it, and bent it into Mobius strips; he furled line in a thousand new ways, as if he were inventing a new script and writing it in one infinitely recurving utterance until I thought the bounds of beauty would break."
"He piled loops in heaps and praised height. He unrolled the scroll of the air, extended it, and bent it into Mobius strips; he furled line in a thousand new ways, as if he were inventing a new script and writing it in one infinitely recurving utterance until I thought the bounds of beauty would break."
From Annie Dillard's "The Stunt Pilot"
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Haven't we seen this already?
Yes. You have if you've been reading my blog for a while. But all the same, I give you a poem inspired by a nonfiction piece that I wrote and posted long ago.
Hello Again, St. Theobald
Hello Again, St. Theobald
I wipe
fingerprint traces
off what ought
to be
two crystal
clear sets
of glass double
doors,
the entrance to
the halls of knowledge
more commonly
known as
the library.
Everyone smudges
their hands
here, the glass
the only place they
wipe off their
grime, but
I wish they’d do
it in the bathrooms.
His voice sounds
in my mind
like thunder, or
a thousand paper towel rolls
hitting tile
flooring from
four stories up.
“You called?
Saint Theobald
speaking, sacrosanct
saint of your kind,
janitor, and
here to give you aid!”
Blue jeans and a
grey shirt hang
on glowing arms,
head, and legs
in the air above
my head,
dripping
ectoplasm all over
the floor.
I wait in
silence,
stand still in
the presence,
watching a girl in
a red coat
obliviously mush
her fingertips
over the next
door.
His voice grates
now
like the creak
of squeegees:
“You missed a
spot,”
and he points a
finger
at the door.
I glower.
No janitor is
ever
exempted from
absolute correction.
Looking down, I
spray Windex
on the next door
over.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
And Fish Swim Through
This pond,
surrounded
by trees and
the murky smell
of decomposition,
is dappled dark in shadow.
The biggest fish
I've ever seen in a pond
this size breaks
the blackness
of weedy water,
sliding slimly underneath,
a silken knife.
But if I
touch the water,
I will feel it only as
air
swirling around my
fingertips.
surrounded
by trees and
the murky smell
of decomposition,
is dappled dark in shadow.
The biggest fish
I've ever seen in a pond
this size breaks
the blackness
of weedy water,
sliding slimly underneath,
a silken knife.
But if I
touch the water,
I will feel it only as
air
swirling around my
fingertips.
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