This Month's Contents: What We Are by William Bronk | The Eight Duino Elegy by Rainer Maria Rilke | A Loss of Something Ever Felt I by Emily Dickinson | Four Hundred and Forty Beats Per Second by Deborah Westmoreland | Epirrhema by Goethe | Humor | Answer to Question of the Month |
Hello all, this is my first time editing the TAT Forum. I've decided to do another poetry issue, as that is my area of expertise, and there are several poems that I've always wanted to see on here but never have. I know poetry can be hard to read sometimes, but it's one of those things that gets more rewarding the more you do it, like following a spiritual path. Poetry can transmit sublime feelings and intuitive knowledge. I think there's something about the left brain trying to find meaning in the dense and jarring language of poetry that allows a different intelligence to manifest. Look for the feeling that enters the body during the reading of a poem, watch it wander and dissipate. Where were you?
What we are? We say we want to become
what we are or what we have an intent to be.
We read the possibilities, or try.
We get to some. We think we know how to read.
We recognize a word, here and there,
a syllable: male, it says perhaps,
or female, talent -- look what you could do --
or love, it says, love is what we mean.
Being at any cost: in the end, the cost
is terrible but so is the lure to us.
We see it move and shine and swallow it.
We say we are and this is what we are
as to say we should be and this is what to be
and this is how. But, oh, it isn’t so.
© William Bronk Online Source.
The creature gazes into openness with all A.S. Kline's translation of Rilke's Duino Elegies can be found here. |
A loss of something ever felt I—
The first that I could recollect
Bereft I was—of what I knew not
Too young that any should suspect
A Mourner walked among the children
I notwithstanding went about
As one bemoaning a Dominion
Itself the only Prince cast out—
Elder, Today, a session wiser
And fainter, too, as Wiseness is—
I find myself still softly searching
For my Delinguent Palaces—
And a Suspicion, like a Finger
Touches my Forehead now and then
That I am looking oppositely
For the site of the Kingdom of Heaven—
Four Hundred and Forty Beats Per Second
|
You must, when contemplating nature,
Attend to this, in each and every feature:
There's nought outside and nought within,
For she is inside out and outside in.
Thus will you grasp, with no delay,
The holy secret, clear as day.
Joy in true semblance take, in any
Earnest play:
No living thing is One, I say,
But always Many.
[An epirrhema, in ancient Greek Old Comedy, was an address usually about public affairs. It was spoken by the leader of one-half of the chorus after that half of the chorus had sung an ode. It was part of the parabasis, or performance by the chorus, during an interlude in the action of the play. ~ from Britannica online]
February's Question: Dear TAT, I have a suggestion for our hip readers regarding the question of the month. At the end of the movie "The Time Machine," three books are discovered missing from George's library shelf. His friend asks the maid: "which three are missing?". These are the three books George has taken into the future with him via his time machine to help the eloi rebuild their society. My question of the month is: "Which three books would you take with you into the future to help improve the human race which has lost it's sense of humanity, knowledge, self, god, history, etc.?" What would you say to them? I am nothing? Nothing exists? Just raise your consciousness and all will be well? My picks:
2. Best technology/agriculture book I could find
3. History of the world
~ Michael
1. Plato's Republic
Answer: "The Zen master Mu-nan sent for his disciple Shoju one day and said, 'I am an old man now, Shoju, and it is you who will carry on this teaching. Here is a book that has been handed down for seven generations from master to master. I have myself added some notes to it that you will find valuable. Here, keep it with you as a sign that I have made you my successor.' Shoju burned it immediately!" ---p. 257 from Stories of the Spirit, Stories of the Heart edited by Christina Feldman and Jack Kornfield (HarperSanFrancisco, 1991)
~I.B.
One of our editors, Dave Weimer, just released a new book. Check out Portrait of a Seeker on Amazon.
Did you enjoy the Forum? Then buy the book! Beyond Mind, Beyond Death is available at Amazon.com.