The Greatest Grandeur
Some say it’s in the
reptilian dance
of the purple-tongued sand goanna,
for there the
magnificent translation
of tenacity into bone and grace occurs.
And some declare it to be an
expansive
desert—solid rust-orange rock
like dusk captured on earth in
stone—
simply for the perfect contrast it provides
to the blue-grey
ridge of rain
in the distant hills.
Some claim the harmonics of
shifting
electron rings to be most rare and some
the complex motion of
seven sandpipers
bisecting the arcs and pitches
of come and retreat over
the mounting
hayfield.
Others, for grandeur, choose
the terror
of lightning peals on prairies or the tall
collapsing
cathedrals of stormy seas,
because there they feel dwarfed
and
appropriately helpless; others select
the serenity of that ceiling/cellar
of stars they see at night on placid lakes,
because there they feel
assured
and universally magnanimous.
But it is the dark emptiness
contained
in every next moment that seems to me
the most singularly
glorious gift,
that void which one is free to fill
with processions of
men bearing burning
cedar knots or with parades of blue horses,
belled
and ribboned and stepping sideways,
with tumbling white-faced mimes or
companies
of black-robed choristers; to fill simply
with hammered silver
teapots or kiln-dried
crockery, tangerine and almond custards,
polonaises, polkas, whittling sticks, wailing
walls; that space large
enough to hold all
invented blasphemies and pieties, 10,000
definitions
of god and more, never fully
filled, never.
~ Pattiann Rogers ~
(Firekeeper: New and Selected
Poems)
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