Footpath and Runway (Poem)

When we walk with the Lord

stumbling
along, words lightening my feet
pondering their path
rainy Chicago

airport tarmac baptized iridescent black
delayed from 1:43 to 2:08pm
stewardess gesticulates
her boredom

oxygen is flowing even if
the plastic bag does not inflate.
Who knew that following footsteps would lead
me here?

other men, smarter and more solidly educated
talk to me but I know my place
even if bootless ambition makes it pinch.

I resolve to turn my back on old goals
even if my hankering after them makes me
crane ’round,

Lot’s wife, to see my past destinations shrink
reversing their direction as I reorient myself.

What a glory He sheds on our way

I have chosen the sheep’s life by choosing
the Shepherd

but I have not chosen unreason
I choose to be a Logical sheep
a sheep of the Logos.

plane stalled on the runway almost to take-off
yellow signs order drivers to yield to aircraft,
wings matter now, having them,
or not.

Reliquaria–T. Crunk (Poem)

1.  Found Hand-Painted on a Tin Flue Cover

Ribbon of black crepe
draped on a door knob

like broken strings
hanging from a loom

with the words:  Weep not.
What do I need of this world?

2.  S. P. Dinsmoor Describes His Tomb

I have made myself a coffin with a glass lid.
By the door of my grave house

I have set a cement angel and a stone jug.
When I see the hose coming down, the lid will fly open

and I will sail out into the air like a locust.
If I am called above, the angel will help me on my way.

If I have to go below, I will grab my jug
and fill it with water somewhere on the road down.

Meantime, every day I pray–O Lord
teach me that I am but earth,

a hollow vessel of clay,
only a wisp of breath against my emptiness.

3.

They have yet to figure out
the name of the church

two men driving in Barkley Lake
around Cain’s Mill a few years ago

found the whole steeple of
cross and all

half-buried in the mud shallows.

Gass on Philosophy as a Vocation

There are a few vocations (like the practice of poetry or the profession of philosophy) that are so uncalled for by the world, so unremunerative by any ordinary standards, so inherently difficult, so undefined, that to choose them suggests that more lies behind the choice than a little encouraging talent and a few romantic ideals.  To persevere in such a severe and unrewarding course requires the mobilization of the entire personality–each weakness as well as each strength, each quirk as well as every normality.  For any one of the reasons that a philosopher offers to support that principle he has taken in to feed and fatten, there will be in action alongside it, sometime in the shade of the great notion itself, coarse and brutal causes in frequently stunning numbers, causes with a notable lack of altruism and nobility, causes with shameful aims and antecedents.  This has to be understood and accepted.  Valery’s belief that every philosophy is an important piece of its author’s autobiography need not be rejected as reductive; for whatever the subliminal causes and their kind are like, the principle must stand and defend itself like a tree against the wind; it must make its own way out into who knows what other fields of intelligence, to fall or flourish there.  –“At Death’s Door:  Wittgenstein”

Stout Affirmation–Kenneth Burke (Poem)

Whomsoever there are–
Whether enemies, than which there is several,
Or friends, than which there is few–
Here me of what I am speak of,
Leaving me promulge.

A great amt. of beauties emplenish the world,
Wherein I would o’erglance upon.
There are those which you go out and exclaim:
“Why!  How brim-brim!”

I shall be concerning sank ships
Throughout the entire Endure-Myself,
And may my foes become stumbled.
But I want you should, my dear, transpire–
Always transpire, grace-full thanlike one.

You, most prettier sing-rabbit,
And by never,
And lessermost from beneath not–
Prith, give on’t.

YES!!!

 

A Profile–Kenneth Burke (Poem)

mouse turds
not best of mouse

but best sign
of mouse

about this human specimen
know this one

honest thing
about him:

so crooked
he even found a way

to forge
his own signature

a rabbit’s tracks
are straighter

and if he is
where he says he is

you can be sure
he’s lying

Bij Mist—Poem

Eliot had his Ash Wednesday,
But I had his Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
And a Wednesday of my own.

Volcanic ash farted by some
Unnameable Icelandic volcano     (April 2010)
Grounds flyers

In the UK, intending no prophecy, I quote Hecuba’s words as the ash cloud drifts
South and east:

“Nunc trahor exul, inops.”

Clouds of unknowing
Reveal my deordinate self—
Anxiety quietly unmans me.

Aboard a bus, a coach
On a carriage-way,
13 hours, Manchester to Amsterdam

white tulips in a lamplit English village
stretch and harden into white cliffs at Dover

We ferry to Calais.

Conferring in Crewe
Take-away northern industrial village
Ordinary language (philosophy)
In a place consternatingly plain.

No pile of Galaxy chocolate
Can sweeten this ashy mess
Nothing colligates these loose ends.

 (“Get me off of this English Roundabout!”)

 Oh, Eliot!

“Teach us to care and not to care:
Teach us to sit still
Even among these ashes,
Our peace in his will.”

Well, not so much.

Reading Ebersole, Reading Bouwsma

(A section from an unpublished essay.)

Their pages crucially differ in animating spirits: I have talked about one
as mulish the other as sprightly. But I can say more. At an even deeper
level, Ebersole’s pages are animated by a strictness of linguistic conscience.
Bouwsma’s are animated by a spontaneity of linguistic consciousness—a lin-
guistic hilaritas libertatis. For example, there is an deep-going reason why
Bouwsma was attracted to and imitated pages of James Joyce, and self-
consciously built unacknowledged quotations or near-quotations of literary
works into the structure of his essays. Bouwsma provokes his reader ver-
bally, reminds his reader of all of the highways and byways of words, of all
the wonders of words, and of how their wonders can and should make us
marvel at them. Ebersole minces words. He was a working poet as well as a
working philosopher, but anyone who knows Ebersole’s poetry knows that in
it the same strictness of linguistic conscience is on display. I cannot imagine
Ebersole on a spree among words like Bouwsma’s in this passage of his John
Locke Lectures, a passage describing Plato’s Realm of Being:

Imagine…a museum—a museum, deep in calm, fixed in breath-
lessness, done in silence, clothed in invisibility, awful, laid away
in heaven. And the walls thereof are purest essence, some quint-
essence, some tri-essence, but none semi-essence. If senescence is
no wall, for neither is oldness nor youngerness any ness at all, all
is evermore and never the less. And of what essence and what
essences are those walls? Of all heavenlinessences are they and of
brightlinessence of the beaminest. Essences participating in one
another, they ring-round this conjugation of hyper-supers…This
is the museum of quiddities, of whatnesses in their highest nest,
tucked away, ensconced, waiting for the refiners defining, so fine
are they. The museum of none-such such-and suches.

Line up alongside that this from Ebersole’s (anticipatory-posthumous au-
tobiographical) poem, “Conversation with a Dead Philosopher” (a crow is
speaking):

The clock can’t tell you what it says
the way a human tells you.
Maybe I am just a mess of gears and wheels,
and everything I say
is just like half past two—
where I can’t tell you
what I say at all.
People stopped and puzzled when I talked,
wondered what to make of
anything I said.
And if I made them ask themselves
What of heads or tails to make
of a philosopher’s talking,
that was a good thing I did,
I would say.
Yes, I would say that.
Then he flew away,
calling “caw-caw.”

Here is another, related deep difference: it makes sense to say that Eber-
sole and Bouwsma each aims at a kind of simplicity, a philosophical sim-
plicity. But the simplicities aimed at are not the same. We can borrow
a pair of terms from French criticism in the nineteenth century: simplicité
and simplesse. The first we might call naive simplicity, the second
sophisticated simplicity.  The first is simplicity as a native endowment,
an unspoiled innocence or uncorruptedness.  The second is simplicity
as a complicated disposition, an achievement of disciplined responsiveness.
Ebersole presents himself as the simple man.  Bouwsma presents
himself as the simple wise man.  Ebersole’s mulishness, his strictness of linguistic
conscience, his simplicité mean that he is prone to be charged with failing to be a
philosopher by being a plain man. Ebersole can seem Xenophonic. Bouwsma’s
sprightliness, his spontaneity of linguistic consciousness, his simplesse mean
that he is prone to be charged with failing to be a philosopher by being a sophist.
Bouwsma can seem Protagorean.

No Finis–Poem (David Schubert)

When you cannot go further
It is time to go back and wrest
Out of failure some
Thing shining.

As when a child I sat
On the stoop and spoke
The state licenses, the makes
Of autos going somewhere–

To others I leave the fleeting
Memory of myself.

Spring–Poem

Beneath a Barlett pear
Upright in its spring candor
A judgmatic plum grows
Grasping upward with spread fingers
Delicately dotted warm pink

Birdsong garlands the empty spaces
Of the yard as the afternoon
Sunlight stretches to retain
Its ubiquitous gloze

I sit on the edge
Of the yard–in it but
Not fully of it–wearing
No bridal garment

My clothing accuses me:
Black shirt, grey pants
Black socks and shoes, a
Chromatic color amiss:
But my eyes are blue

Leaving Mayberry–Poem

For Poetry Day:

Death paid a call
Last night
Dropped in unexpected
We weren’t receiving visitors

Andy Griffith was on tv so
At first we didn’t notice
Death’s tuneless quiet whistle

But when Barney said
“Nip it! Nip it! Nip it in the bud!”
Death stopped whistling
And all we could hear
Was silence and Death
Rocking in his chair

We knew someone was headed
To Mt. Pilot