Thursday, May 16, 2019

The Story of the Universe, Sonnet #457

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









There’s light and its divisibility
Or blackness and invisibility.
We get distant glimpses of genesis,
Stars that could blink out at any second
Or bloom like a lovely woman’s kiss.
No, in our beginning is not our end.
Time is a thrown bone, not an arrow,
Flung end over end, sucked of its marrow.
The story of the universe, begun
Long before the kindling of our sun
Has been acted out, but never told,
A dumbshow of the older growing old.
A boy in leg braces has his star; stares
At it when he can. It is always there.

Note: Photo artwork by the author.

Thursday, May 9, 2019

The Moon Calf (Franz Sedlacek), Sonnet #456

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
















I once rode the moon calf 
Over the city roofs.
He was only a half
And made a nice saddle.
(Please don’t ask me for proof.)
Both of us were addled
By his mother’s mooning,
As if she didn’t mind
I might be marooning
Her boy from his own kind.
My ride bucked and I fell
Into a wishing well.
I said, “You go home now.”
The calf became a cow.

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Powehi, Black Hole, Sonnet #455

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





From every point three axes extend,
Of height, dimension, and depth in all
Directions; each axis points to each point.
But what if the point is not just the end
Or start, let’s say, of an horizontal
Axis, but a kind of reality joint?
Passing beyond each point axes enter
Neg space (unless we’re the minus center).
The black hole boils like a witch’s pot
Turning what there is into what is not.
Does it spew what’s left into a new space
To launch galaxies or an alien race,
Or the negative of our universe,
Everything here created in reverse? 

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Spring (Giuseppe Arcimboldo), Sonnet #454

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


















The vernal air smells first of earth,
Healthy rot freed of snow and frost,
A renewal not without cost
In drowned worms and corruption’s worth.
But that’s when the wind and clouds still
Suppress urgency with a chill.
Even then magnolias bud,
Crocuses and snowdrops peek
Through the dirt, while a foggy scud
Carries off the unwholesome reek.
A day passes, the sunlight blooms,
Igniting our backyard bowers.
Trailing uncountable perfumes,
A lady’s dressed just in flowers.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Limits of Reason (Paul Klee), Sonnet #453

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


















Reason arrives in the shape of a ball,
(And, no, it won’t come rolling when you call).
The limits of reason are sun-dark red
When the dust (ladders and tethers) of thought
Becloud a light in what you thought you sought.
They say there’s no saying what can’t be said.
No perfect round ball exists in nature,
Though some suggest we can imagine one.
About either ball, how can they be sure?
My reasoning only misshapes reason.
With two hands I toss the sunlight awry.
I can blind my mirrored eyes with a blink.
But no one can answer the question “why?”
No matter how reasonably they think.

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Group IV, The Ten Largest, No. 7, Adulthood (Hilma af Klint), Sonnet #452

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


















Behind closed eyes, what’s written I redact —
Such is not just an idea but an act.
I don’t mean dreams, nor the imagined fact,
Like the nautilus, a chambered prison
Of the real, the unreal, and the abstract.
All I see is suspect and misprision.
Then bloom the perfect flowers of the now,
The dance of the ideal shapes, the entr’acte
Between times (those blind-eyed scenes of the show).
Now doesn’t admit even one and three,
Only two, which becomes nonentity
And leaves a shape we only think we see.
It’s all we know, not all we need to know.

Thursday, April 4, 2019

Bird in Space (Constantin Brancusi), Sonnet #451

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

















A bird in flight, unless it is diving,
Will spread and flash its wings in relentless
Thrust upon the air, a constant striving
For elevation, distance, a restless
Agitation driven by hunger’s need,
Expressed in unmindfully graceful speed.
Only a bird in space can fold its wings
As it rises and point up with its beak,
Not needing to look down to hunt, to seek.
And no bird in airless flight ever sings.
The artist could have named it Bird In Flight,
But that would have tethered it to the ground.
You say he has, here, with a marble mound.
Imagined, the bird disappears in sight.