Rare
Discipline is a gateway
from the barker’s coaxing
and hawking
romance, and pleasure, and alabaster skin,
Suburbans on verdant byways,
stuff we deserve,
and interviews:
“Your take on life’s meaning, in two words or less…”.
Heads bow,
pondering beyond feet and floor.
This biding of time is
the mortification of pews,
a faith that suffering settles debt.
It is solitude in assembly,
a safety for the surrounded,
a solid use of space.
The quiet is frightening.
We do not choose to hide our selves—
it is learned disposition.
Nakedness is confession;
derision prowls in search of her.
Even mothers wound.
The quiet, we know, have so much to say.
“The quiet are frightening;
let us gather apart from them.
(“They do so lack decorum.”)
“Let us together consider the weather.”
“What could be grander?”
“What could be blander?”
and
“Isn’t it good that we’re having it?”
Light.
Dark…
Light/dark…
Like dust in a beam,
ethereal:
a certainty, doubtfully seen.
Eyes are windows.
We peer in vain into panes
that lock in night.
But when the lights of eyes linger,
they wonder
about shells, and souls.
(“Are you a soul?”)
Like toes that tread on chill, dewed grass
and warm earth;
the smell of living things,
vivid as taste:
it is the exit of entering.
…and isn’t it rare!
Still as faith we wait.
We wait,
certain
that longing is promise
of a sort that is true.
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