
can I eschew metaphor and still awaken the sacred
or abandon symbol while evoking the numinous
in such an incurious language as English?
…
is not every religion and every ineffable being
whether many gods or one jealous of our devotion
needful of the whole expanse of poetic devices?
…
even Homer gave the dawn ‘rosy fingers,’
likened warriors to fierce beasts and mourned
the wrack and ruin of the ‘holy town’ of Troy.
…
but likening a thing is not the same as a direct address
or raising conciousness of qualities too wonderful
for either metaphoric or plainly spoken words.
…
poetry can do more than elevate love and loss to art,
it is also the chief medium for expressing awe
greater even than sacred monuments built since time immemorial.
…
how then do I convey how small I felt
when I gazed at the unblinkered vastness
of the starlit sky in the Mojave desert
…
or express the emotions experienced at our children’s births,
evoke the wonder of the white-tipped alps
or the sacred stillness of a lake when its reflection merged water and sky?
…
seeking meaning for qualities we do not possess nor comprehend
neuters both praise and prayer, turning
a deaf ear to the plaintive melody of the thrush in the twilight hush.
…
perhaps the true enemy is the so-called sagacity of the aged,
the childlike wonder I once knew displaced
with cleverness masquerading as meaning and wisdom
…
the simple faith of the child long ago surrendered
to sophistication, cynicism and unwillingness
to believe, hope or dream in anything larger than myself.
…
sometimes a simple challenge exposes the paucity
of imagination, the depth of malaise and the
emotional inertia rendering language inert.
…
how should I pray when I no longer possess the belief of a child
when simple faith and the passions I once experienced have vanished
and our children’s and grandchildren’s futures seem so bleak?
…
are you there, God, or am I talking only to myself?
…
About the Creator
John Cox
Old school writer of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Ain't got none of that.



Comments (3)
Ah, John. So much here that resonates with me too.
Oooo, paucity is a new word for me. Your last line hit me so hard because I've asked that question too. The answer, or lack thereof said a lot. Loved your take on the challenge!
Beautiful poem, John. So many layers to peel away and beautiful imagery. I felt the heaviness of mourning what you have lost with age as life has bid you abandon the simple wonder of childhood.