EVENING

EVENING

A Poem by Stephen Jackson
"

Almost the last poem in my book DEAD PEOPLE ON HOLIDAY, and I suppose a sort of epitaph. Even in a godless universe and an ephemeral life there can still be joy and enduring worth.

"

As I contemplate the waste that is a living mind

The moon, thin as a sabre, darkens in the sky.

More slender than my fingernail

Or so I want to think �"

As if I could truly snatch it down;

As if my being here, and now

Could matter more than a folly of flies

Dancing towards the extinction of light

On a puddle. Above me: the veins of a cirrus,

Livid a moment ago,

Drained bloodless now;

Grey gossamer of a blush turned to dust.

 

Walt Whitman did not fear self-contradiction.

He was large: he contained multitudes.

So let me find a way to dignify myself and cut the loss,

As he did - 

No more, I’ll plead, than any scanty face on Southwark Bridge.

Conspirators, we seem to be, if only in oblivion -

Each of us slipping, by insidious degrees,

Into an empire of levelled shade.

My neighbour says your inner voice keeps bright, it stays the same;

Only the flesh falls, she says.  Yet even laughter thickens, wheezing

Like a superannuated gramophone,    

Piping your chronicles of wasted time, of hollowed afternoons,

Into ears of those who, less than ever, need to know.

But I need to believe that the fact and act of thought

Are more than fortuitous.

I want to believe that somebody out there cares.

I have to believe I have the right.

 

I’m a middle-aged man

As now I never tire of saying.

They should have told me years ago

How consciousness is tyranny

And how predestination sets you free.

Let fly the caged bird

From chattered words.

To take flight needs no vindication.

A dance lives in, and on, and for, itself -

Don’t pull it down.

There is no recklessness, in a dominion shorn of purpose:

Its dynamic is serene, complete:

Balletic tension, wrought of spontaneity and determinism

Is what holds it fast: causeless, and requited by itself,

All meant to be, and nothing meant at all:

 

As the great space of creation outpaces us all,

It does not need us:

If evening envelops, as it does,

An oceanic shoal of little worlds

- cooling like basalt, or labradorite �"

It is no matter.  They will come back again:

Unworded, heedlessly, not needing words

After we are gone.

Infinity does not speak to us.

It does not give obeisance

It will let us go.

As the moon incises its great arc into night

It does not die, it will return:

And clouds, flecks that melt upon creation’s face

Will flutter still like feathers

In their immemorial clime,

Or fall like petals

In the unremarked epiphanies

Of wordless things

Long after we have ceased to know.

Don’t fret about your own, diminishing sentience �"

The transience of it, the loss of it,

As what has come from nothing goes to nothing;

To be dead is no worse than to be unborn.

So don’t waste time on me

When I am done:

Don’t reach towards my light

For there’ll be none,

No more than from an ant burnt by a match;

But rather, seek out the light of the world

And find, with necessary impertinence

Of all ephemeral, existent things,

Your own, your transitory moment in the sun.

 

 

© 2011 Stephen Jackson


Author's Note

Stephen Jackson
I welcome reviews of this book and will do everything I can to help established reviewers. See my poem DAY AND NIGHT for more detail.

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Added on August 5, 2011
Last Updated on August 5, 2011

Author

Stephen Jackson
Stephen Jackson

London, South East England, United Kingdom



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