Showing posts with label Narcissus Caravaggio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narcissus Caravaggio. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Narcissus (Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio) Sonnet #450

My book of the first 200 of these sonnets is now available for purchase. Click here:
My Human Disguise.

















I don’t call that man a nattering ass
Who says he created my looking glass
Since I opened his mouth to amuse me
With my own exquisite philosophy.
No one can say I didn’t make the world
That flaps like a flag some soldier unfurled.
I needn’t apologize that I willed
To have that soldier spared, wounded, or killed.
There’s no one to extend my regrets to,
Except my entirely imagined “you.”
I make, making sure I can’t change today.
“Prove it!” you demand, which I made you say.
There’s only my beautiful Narcissus
And can be only him and me, no “us.”

Note: I also write about this great painting
in Sonnet #351.







Thursday, May 18, 2017

Narcissus in Rome (Caravaggio), Sonnet # 351






















Some men are just reflections of themselves.
What the mirror shows them is all they are.
As the head moves, the unblinking eye delves
Into itself with an unthinking stare.
I knew a man bent to kiss his image,
Stopping just short, careful not to smudge
The glass or ripple the pool of oil sludge.
He saw the epitome of his Age.
When others dared to look into his glass,
He wasn't, he was -- it was hard to tell.
When they saw him, they saw themselves as well.
One day his image caught fire; flaming gas
Consumed itself and left a dull halo,
His semblance struggling to form from below.

Note: I also write about this great image in
Sonnet #450.