Most don't realize that this wonderfully intense piece of poetry was written to the poet's uber-muse Brigit. His passion for her was great and seems, honestly, undiminished by time and distance. I've read some of her letters and seen the pictures. I really can't blame him.
Eyes of Stained Glass and Fire
There is a point in the arc of living lives parallel
where all the gifts of heaven and thoughts of hell
will not produce an image of provable clarity.
The charity of our prayers, visions taken alive
to be slowly cut down in the tortures we strive
to justify in meandering memories and prophecy.
Buying the worldview of others, sold in paper weighed
by scales that are irrelevant to truth. Parts played
on a stage we are forced upon, acting and reacting
to the directions out of confusion, the cool breeze
of our self-awareness blocked by the windbreak trees
we fooled ourselves into thinking as a clever thing,
to throw in the face of others. Ancient harmonies
reborn in an instant of illumination and honest desire
when one finally looks through eyes of stained glass and fire.
William F. DeVault. all rights reserved.
Friday, December 01, 2006
Eyes of Stained Glass and Fire
Labels: 1997, Brigit 0 observationsThe Amomancer Tweets!
Explaining the Tags
You will note, gentle reader, that all works under this blog now display "tags" to help classify and assign the works for your review and enjoyment.
These largely fall into 4 categories:
Year of writing, e.g. "1999"
Book published in, e.g. "from an unexpected quarter"
Inspiring muse, e.g. "Aubergine"
Genre, e.g. "erotica"
We are still in the process of cleaning up the tags, so please bear with us. Yes, some muses are classified under more than one tag, some poems appear in more than one book, or not yet in any volume, and some years are...hazy.
These largely fall into 4 categories:
Year of writing, e.g. "1999"
Book published in, e.g. "from an unexpected quarter"
Inspiring muse, e.g. "Aubergine"
Genre, e.g. "erotica"
We are still in the process of cleaning up the tags, so please bear with us. Yes, some muses are classified under more than one tag, some poems appear in more than one book, or not yet in any volume, and some years are...hazy.
0 observations:
Post a Comment