The MountaintopA Poem by Paris HladThe Mountaintop[1]
-In Admiration of John Keats-
I stood upon a mountaintop And gazed upon the vale;
I watched the sun sink in the hills And wonder did prevail
'It is a grace,' I muttered then; ‘It is both night and day,'
Then started back upon a path That led me on my way.
I stood upon a mountaintop And shivered in the chill
That seizes hearts like icy hands That
clutch what ones they will
'It is a grace,' I muttered then, ‘It is both night and day,
Then started out upon a path That led another way. [1] Several of the poems in this section deal
with a similar subject matter and derive specifically from a conversation Paris
had with his brother about the poetry of John Keats, particularly his most
important poem, “Ode Written on a Grecian Urn.” Not long before he passed,
Paris asked me to acknowledge his brother’s contribution to his work. He wanted
it known that David helped him dissect what was dark and existentially
complicated, steering him away from ego and intellectual nitpicking. There is a
spilling of psychological blood in the discussion of such topics, and his
brother’s sacrifice on Paris’s behalf was greatly appreciated. David was a
thinker and avid reader who devoted much of his life to art and overseeing the
operation of an imaginary baseball league that he founded after his first day
in kindergarten. © 2023 Paris Hlad |
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Added on August 7, 2023 Last Updated on August 7, 2023 AuthorParis HladSouthport, NC, United States Minor Outlying IslandsAboutI am a 70-year-old retired New York state high school English teacher, living in Southport, NC. more..Writing
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