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Friday, September 6, 2002
A Way to Love God
Here is the shadow of truth, for only the shadow is true...
               
               Here is the shadow of truth, for only the shadow is true.
               
               And the line where the incoming swell from the sunset Pacific
               
               First leans and staggers to break will tell all you need to know
               
               About submarine geography, and your father's death rattle
               
               Provides all biographical data required for the Who's Who of the dead.
               
               
            
               
               I cannot recall what I started to tell you, but at least
               
               I can say how night-long I have lain under the stars and 
               
               Heard mountains moan in their sleep.  By daylight,
               
               They remember nothing, and go about their lawful occasions
               
               Of not going anywhere except in slow disintegration.  At night
               
               They remember, however, that there is something they cannot remember.
               
               So moan.  Theirs is the perfected pain of conscience that
               
               Of forgetting the crime, and I hope you have not suffered it.  I have.
               
               
            
               
               I do not recall what had burdened my tongue, but urge you
               
               To think on the slug's white belly, how sick-slick and soft,
               
               On the hairiness of stars, silver, silver, while the silence
               
               Blows like wind by, and on the sea's virgin bosom unveiled
               
               To give suck to the wavering serpent of the moon; and, 
               
               In the distance, in plaza, piazza, place, platz, and square,
               
               Boot heels, like history being born, on cobbles bang.
               
               
            
               
               Everything seems an echo of something else.
               
               
            
               
               And when, by the hair, the headsman held up the head
               
               Of Mary of Scots, the lips kept on moving,
               
               But without sound.  The lips,
               
               They were trying to say something very important.
               
               
            
               
               But I had forgotten to mention an upland
               
               Of wind-tortured stone white in darkness, and tall, but when
               
               No wind, mist gathers, and once on the Sarré at midnight,
               
               I watched the sheep huddling.  Their eyes
               
               Stared into nothingness.  In that mist-diffused light their eyes
               
               Were stupid and round like the eyes of fat fish in muddy water,
               
               Or of a scholar who has lost faith in his calling.
               
               
            
               
               Their jaws did not move.  Shreds
               
               Of dry grass, gray in the gray mist-light, hung
               
               From the side of a jaw, unmoving.
               
               
            
               
               You would think that nothing would ever again happen.
               
               
            
               
               That may be a way to love God.
               
               
            
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