Wow! Let me pause to take a: Wow! Let me pause to take a breath . . . if I can catch my breath after reading this manificent poem. Only a few Poets, most of them here on Postpoems, can affect me in this way. And if I am not able to catch my breath, I am going to send you an invoice for its replacement, lol.
Here is the metaphor, by which I am going to try to describe what this Poem does. I saw a music video in which the Dublin Philharmonic Orchestra was performing the first movement of my very favorite symphony, Dvorak's Ninth, Aus Der Neuen Welt. As the melody approach its completion, the various instruments are playing vigorously, each one following its own process, but the sum total of that process is Dvorak's most masterful composition. This poem works the same way: there are many processes going on, being observed by the speaker's consciousness, and while each process could be a singular incident, the gathering of them in a single poem orchestrates them to the point where the sum of them is the poem, the plurality of them become the singularity of the poem. On a large scale, this kind of artistry leads to epics---I think of Vergil, primarily. But the size of the poem ultimately is no indicator of its poetic strength and meaning. Terms and labels ultimately are no indication of those things, either. All that matters is the effect of the poem on its reader, and this poem succeeds . . . magnificently, triumphantly, and consistently. Most poems are meteorizes that flash across the sky in a streak and then fall to earth and sputter out. But some poems are like stars---able to produce such a powerful effect that their light can cross hundreds, sometimes thousands, of light years to reach us. This poem is like those stars.
Thank you for sharing such: Thank you for sharing such stirring and much-deserved words of appreciation for our shining star. Every word is beautiful and absolutely true.
The juxtaposition of two: The juxtaposition of two lives is very subtle in this poem, which takes a very conversational tone, but the power of the juxtaposition is undeniable and very convincing.
In short lines, a brief span,: In short lines, a brief span, and a very conversational tone, this poem delves splendidly into a universal human condition.
I apologize for falling: I apologize for falling behind in my reading. I like this poem very much, and its brevity conceals some very deep meaning, and also echoes, in a ripple effect, of pain.
AGENDA: GRINDING AMERICA DOWN:
You haven't done it to yourselves. It was done to you – by those with a Marxist agenda to destroy America.
And if you fall – we all fall… and Europe is already very near being flushed down the shit-pipe, by these wanker-banker globalists.
And you – America, are their final obstacle.
911 & Covid-19 & Agenda 2030 – are merely stepping stones, to a global communist government.
AGENDA: GRINDING AMERICA DOWN
https://www.bitchute.com/video/LYKWuNl8xJwg/
smiling ear to ear:
You always knock my socks off, and I know how fond you are of socks. No pun intended. But it’s true. I’m smiling ear to ear right now. And all I can say, is thank you.
it's all group think now:
Have you seen the inside of modern schoolrooms… it resembles nothing I remember. It’s all about group desks and pods. No individual anything.
It’ s all Marxist group think conditioning. Gone are the old wooden desks of Dead Poet Society.
all the difference :
one life makes all
the difference.
and, knowing that Love
stitches galaxy to galaxy,
and everything,
together,
remember who they are.
And let us remember the name – Starward. Because I know of no one, over the many years… who gives as great as he… of his soul, of his mind, of his time, and of his dedicated contribution – as this one shining star.
And I can’t possibly tell you, how many dark mornings I’ve woke to with no hope for humanity, where this man has left me a beautiful soulful comment, or an exchange of personal messages – and given me a new trail of light, to get me through my day.
Dusk to Dawn: in the mornings the color
purple has a backdrop seen
by blue and clouds make up the red, white backdrops
and in a little while the sun shows a little of itself.
Then the orange glow of the Sun shines and in an hour latter
it's not recommended to stare at it anymore.
I was in Baton Rouge, Louisana at 5:00 am!