Last night was the Middlesex Cluster's talent show. It was great fun and very funny. I read three poems and was supposed to read more but the show ran long and I gave up my second slot. So, I thought I'd post the poems I didn't read here. They're longish so I'll just do one at a time.
The
Trouble with Finitude
I try, from time to time,
usually late at night
after one too many glasses of wine,
to consider my mortality.
(I have been led to
believe
that such consideration
is valuable
in a spiritual way.
God knows where I got
that....
Well, of course, God
knows,
I'm just not sure.)
But try as I might, I'm
not adroit at such thoughts.
It seems to me that I
have always been alive.
I don't remember not
being alive.
Granted, I have no
personal recollections
of when most of North
America was covered by ic
or of the Bronze Age
or the French Revolution
or of the Black Sox
scandal.
But I do know about all
that through things I've read
and musicals I've seen
and the History Channel.
I know, intellectually,
that I've not always been alive,
but I don't know it,
as they say,
“in my gut”.
(What a strange phrase
that is,
since I am sure my 'gut'
is a totally dark part of
my body,
awash with digestive
fluids
and whatever remains of
the chicken and peas
I had for dinner and
strange compounds
moving inexorably—I
hope!--through my large
and small intestines.)
My problem is this:
I
have no emotional connection to finitude.
All I know and feel is
tangled up with being alive.
Dwelling on the certainty
of my own death
is beyond my ken, outside
my imagination,
much like trying to
imagine
the vast expanse of
Interstellar Space
while living in
Connecticut.
So, whenever someone
suggests that
I consider my mortality,
I screw up my face and
breathe deeply
pretending I am imagining
the world
without me alive in it.
What I'm actually doing
is remembering
things I seldom
remember--
my father's smell, an old
lover's face,
the feel of sand beneath
my feet,
the taste of watermelon,
the sound of thunder
rolling toward me
from miles away.
Perhaps when I come to
die
(Perish the thought!)
there will be a moment,
an instant,
some flash of knowledge
or a stunning
realization.
“Ah,” I will say to
myself,
just before Oblivion sets
in,
“this is
finitude....”
jgb
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