THE MAN WHO NEVER READS A POEM
It is difficult
to get the news from poems,
yet men die miserably every day
for lack
of what is found there.
William Carlos Williams
The man who never reads a poem must be
a living dead man, closed off from a celebration of words
reminding him of what he already knows, awakening
him, bringing him to his senses
as Huxley’s parrots did in his utopian island,
fluttering about in their rainbow plumage,
exotic pigments of red and yellow
and an occasional genetic fluke of midnight blue
trained to squawk slogans of be here now
such as “Attention!”
If dreams are the royal road to the unconscious,
poems are a gilded boulevard of enchantment.
A Phoenix, a bird of enlightenment soars overhead,
in a mellifluous rhythmic wake-up call
galvanizing the quotidian with memorable
images and word play, gently easing him
out of slumber, capturing a moment or a memory
with an imaginative use of words never seen
or heard before in surprising syntax, lighting
a spark that can “sprout roses and spit bullets.”
An antidote to indifference, poems provide
authentic insight for untangling the vicissitudes
of love and are a divinely inspired light illuminating
the path toward his Final End.