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The Spring of '90 and other poems - 1. The Spring of '90 and other poems
.
The Spring of ‘90
and other poems written
when I was 22 years old[1]
by AC Benus
Poem No. 1
It’s out there, the meaning of it all
All we need to recall, is what’s fair
Calling names, that’s not the thing to do
Although it may be true, it’s not sane
We need know, life’s not all about gain.
Poem No. 2
Repression breeds obsession.
Poem No. 3
The moon rose and almost killed me;
Killed me with its loveliness.
Every moment I begged it not to change
And every moment, it did.
I thought she could not top herself;
In her pain, I was alone;
She swamped me with her eternal beauty,
And I did envy every moment she changed.
In your light that struck me thus,
an answer was seen;
How can you be as my mind conceived,
and not stay the same for me?
Floating chance of escape,
gone the moment seen….
Poem No. 4
How sweet can be the thought of you,
when you are not involved.
When love takes the hand of you,
and all your faults resolve.
Poem No. 5
On a winter’s day, she came to me,
smiling about the face.
She opened her heart, and spoke to me
as if I knew her from before.
On a winter’s night, she came to me,
inviting all the while.
Her lure, none but an unhappy smile,
which spoke louder than she.
How can it be I’ve not seen her more –
My dreams are never so good –
And yet she stood as never before
Unmatched, as if anyone could.
What said she to me, I can’t recall,
For in the instant she smiled, I knew
My life would never be the same
And this never could I explain.[2]
Poem No. 6
My friend David has a dangerous “maybe” –
beware when you hear him say it,
whatever the situation may be;
leave the room, do anything to avoid it,
for he has a devious “maybe.”
Whatever the situation may be,
never give him the chance to use it,
for when he does, the outcome’s always the same;
hope for a simple yes or no,
whatever the situation may be.
With “maybe” the outcome’s always the same –
my friend David has a dangerous “maybe…”
for his maybe evolves into a “no.”
My friend has a devious “maybe”
with him the answer’s always the same.
Poem No. 7
The best ideas are the ones
which never get written down.
The ones for which words
are least suited.
Poem No. 8
Vivaldi wrote the Seasons
Botticelli painted La primavera
and I change the screen door
Of all the ways in the world
to trace the miracle change of the world
I mark it in the lowliest way
They greeted the spring with joy
and the fall with registration
but I, I change the screen door.
Poem No. 9
My life has changed
it’s gone to the obscene
today for the first time
I wished I had a fax machine
Poem No. 10
for Rodney, thanks[3]
Once there was a clock that had no works
Once there was a boy who had no voice
In beauty the clock stood empty
All but one thought it had said its all
The boy walked in silence
All but one thought he had nothing to say
Mechanical works and a skillful voice
Are no more than gifts of hope to ourselves
The will to reason gives the meaning
The power of sympathy brings them alive
The power of a useless clock is an odd gift
But it symbolizes eternal growth.
Once there was a clock that had no works
Once there was a boy who had no voice
All but one thought they had nothing to say
None but one knew they needed each other
Without them none of us can ever say anything
For he knew both could sing again.
Poem No. 11
The sweetest sounds a person can know
are the words spoken to the self
saying let it be so.
Poem No. 12
Poem:
Beauty has a curse
that’s greater than herself
like a child, she only knows
that she wants
To give the desire a name
is to call it a desire
for it gnaws at her victims
in a gentle way
As a child calls to Father
in a meekful voice
crying give me
the curse is in her longing
Postlude:
a desire
a name
they’re always the same
reach it once
and never know
the joy of blindness
need it now
need it forever
it’ll always be the same
Poem No. 13
What day did the world change
for Galileo and his telescope, I don’t know’
for Hubble it was Tuesday
A child without glasses
sits in a classroom
as we sit in the universe
It was Tuesday when
our glasses arrived
Holy Tuesday
when we began
to understand.
Poem No. 14
Life’s a game,
that nobody can win
a basic fact,
but few give in.
Neither will I,
for the minute I know the score
I’ll need know no more.
Poem No. 15
I heard a sound, as I was walking around
One early day, in the cheering month of May
And such a sound, one which is not to be found
In November, June or any month’s ember
Strong and so sure, with unashamèd candor
I heard it though, through clam’ring traffic’s flow
New life’s serene song and melody of green.
Poem No. 16
Prelude:
If only there were enough time in a lifetime
to do a lifetime’s work
to read a lifetime’s books
to find a lifetime’s love.
If only all these were things that could be done
by one person
who only has
one life to waste.
If only there were enough time in a lifetime
to find something
to say
that’s not been said before.
Poem:
The Sirens call in unending voice
“…if only. If only….”
What could you have been
What could you have done
“…if only. If only….”
It never ends, these Harpies’ call
“…if only. If only….”
A life that might have been
Wasted now as then
“…if only. If only….”
The Sirens call and I can’t escape them
…if only….
I could be free of the specter
Of what could be
…if only.
Postlude:
What could be, what could be
come sing to me;
sing the lullaby of hope to me
of what could be, of what could be
Please whisper in my ear
that life has only begun;
caress the thoughts hopeless I hold dear
and bring me peace before you’re done.
For I need you now
in this darkened hour;
here away from the sense of day
reason simply has no power.
Poem No. 17
Spring is beautiful
Floating
Fiery stars, fleet-footed through the trees
Wingèd
As real ones etch heaven’s dome above
A nocturnal chorus of light
All of it floating
All of it saying
Spring is beautiful
It’s a pervasive
Pleasure
To watch them move freely overhead
Poem No. 18
On the 21st floor I began,
my descent from the corporate land
I thought as I entered the empty car,
how nice to have
A speedy car, a rapid fall,
to be on Earth in half a nod
It was my hope, it was my dream,
this day not to stop
Excitement built as the doors began to close,
freedom was at hand
Not to stop, not to nod
to be on earth in half a nod
The fall was swift,
and it made me feel alive;
the door opened,
and on the 18th floor arrived.
People it seemed had
wanted to carpool with me;
a feeling of doom gathered
as three others pushed onboard.
On the 21st floor I began,
my descent from the corporate land;
Twas the 18th now,
with quite a way yet to go;
Anticipation of being grounded
was drowned by talk of corporate things…
Poem No. 19
A picture postcard
from one revision of three
looks inward
from out beneath a tree
It sees the place
it’s supposed to be
it likes its face
but wants to be free
The world of a picture postcard
is a world of make believe
of a sincere lie
of a sign of what could be
In perfect times
a perfect photo
is a useless thing
meant only for dimes
A picture postcard
from one revision of three
looks inward
from out beneath a tree
It sees the place
it’s supposed to be
it likes its face
but wants to be free
For freedom today
has become a commodity
the truth, a tool
for enemies within
How can one be free
in a world where
all can see
there are plenty of lies to spare
The world of a picture postcard
is a world of make believe
of a sincere lie
of a sign of what could be
In perfect times
a perfect photo
is a useless thing
meant only for dimes
But perfect times
will never be
the questions will never
find their mates
And pictures postcards
we shall
always be
for
A picture postcard
from one revision of three
looks inward
from out beneath a tree
It sees the place
it’s supposed to be
it likes its face
but wants to be free.
Poem No. 20
The spring of '90 was very sweet
the sweetest in a hundred years
perhaps the kindest I shall know.
Then the summer came to say
that the world was just the same
or at least, still a work in progress
But spring of ’90 was very sweet
the sweetest in a hundred years
perhaps the kindest I shall know.
Poem No. 21
I’ll keep you there
in a place I’ll make
of kind words and gentle thoughts
high above the everyday
where every longing can be heard.
There high above
in our home of dreams
we can live.
Poem No. 22
Scott
Prelude:
The ultimate truth means the ultimate sadness
he said it not like that, but said it all the same
to come to it, is to know that words only get in the way
He showed me two coins
one from AA, and the other from NA
it was a lucky time to meet him
his one-year anniversary to the day
September eighth was a victory day
one very much like the one before
though with meaning, this one came to be
for when new life meets its beginning
it can never be as it was before
In a world without understanding
the truth is always an insult
he showed me two symbols of his new life
I had none to show for mine
it’s sad to know honesty knows such bounds
The ultimate truth means the ultimate sadness
he said it not like that, but said it all the same
talking facts are painful, for you don’t know where they’ve been;
leaving them where they lie, will only make a mess
and hiding them will surly drive you insane;
to find the truth standing there is the only way
He showed me two coins
symbols of a life he must;
sweet slaps of truth
to remind him who he is
Poem:
Let this be the symbol of who I am
I have thousands of coins
but none could ever mean the same
for this is the symbol of what I am
Every end has its beginning
and every beginning its apprehension
all that’s new is wrought in pain
without a word we knew the same.
To a look that could launch a thousand dreams
I could speak of only pointless tings
in this cold comfort, my new life began
The truth is always and insult
and saying it makes it so
words trick when they are sincere
and hide their worth, when not.
Postlude:
In the morning, when I woke up
and remembered what has been
a million words can only screw up
the feelings that have been
Emptiness and loneliness
are but hopeful dreams
next to the willingness
that makes the truth obscene
Is there one among you
who knows what I mean;
one word that speaks true
one thought of what I mean
He knows
and it makes me sad
that he knows me better
than I know myself
Is there one among you
who knows what I mean;
one word that speaks true
one thought of what I mean
He knows
and it makes me glad
to know he does
Is there one among you
who knows what I mean;
one word that speaks true
one thought of what I mean
He knows!
Poem No. 23
Prelude:
Stars
like jewels in the grass
a chorus of living light
attest to the end of summer
Their sweet song of light fills my eyes
a vision of the sky above
where all cannot equal
the grandeur in the green
Stars
that thought the seasons would last
have lost their want of flight
and glow to the end of their age
No hope was needed
no will to survive
they simply do what they’ve always done
by simply being alive
They didn’t have to decide
whether living was good enough
no thought was given to not being
they simply were what they are
In the grass
lives a melody
one that will not end
one that cannot be stopped
Why worry if it’s good enough
don’t be trapped in the everyday
these are the things they tell
the only sin is to waste a day
Jewels in the grass
more precious than they know
sing to me in their glow
of things not lost
Poem:
Into the night, I set sail my hopes and dreams
for its rendezvous with chance
up through the gentle breeze it goes
without me, to find a receptive home
to bring me some peace of mind.
Above and below me there is light
some of Earth, some of heaven – but miracles all –
ghosts and phantoms take flight
in the perfect air of this perfect night
it’s just the sky and ground, but miracles all.
The past has been a great one
the day before, a warm one,
but none of it matters;
here in the shattered globe of day
only the unknown has power.
In the moonless September sky
a symphony of nocturnal light dreams
from one point of the compass to the other;
a billion voices sing of the universe
and I am one with it.
All the sadness of the past
all the desire for the worthless
cannot destroy the glory in my eyes;
I stand here, in nowhere,
and see all there is to know.
What profane logic says
that the self is all that matters;
the past, in its whole, points only to now’
this night when all could conceive
that this is all there is.
In the quaking quiet
a riot of peace prevails;
light, from one corner to the other;
light, older than what can be,
and now, and here, I am one with it.
And so we sit here
the mutant great apes that we are
and look out from our cage
to see the light we’ll never know;
of a million places we’ll never go.
In the moonless September sky
a symphony of nocturnal light dreams
from one point of the compass to the other;
a billion voices sing of the universe
and I am one with it.
Postlude:
In the bright light of morning
the words I thought seem untrue
a hoax that doesn’t matter
We forget what once was meant
and find the world the same;
the think that failed to change was us
In the bright light of day
it’s back to the routine
but oh, the worlds I’ve seen
Poem No. 24
Prelude:
On the street, by the lamp, it lies calling
help me help you, it cries in hopeless despair;
how near it was to me, in the used-to be, but now
I faintly recognize it.
On the street, by the lamp, it lies calling
while people of everywhere pass it by.
Poem:
To sleep in gentle hope, to dream in tranquil haste
to see it now, to caress its face
these are the reasons, that I came to me;
to be what I could, to know what I should.
These are the reasons, that I came to me
To see it now, to caress its face
To sleep in gentle hope, to dream in tranquil haste.
Poem No. 25
These are they, that won’t be quelled
from which heaven makes its hell
In through my window, into my bed
they whisper of things that need to be said
These are they, from which no rest
can be gained without the test
Asking am I strong enough to write
can I tame these creatures of the night
These are they, the night thoughts come
into my ear, seducing to the end on none
There will be no place till they are down
The nocturnal struggle of words resound
These are they, that won’t be quelled
from which heaven makes its hell
In through my window, into my bed
they whisper of things that need to be said
Night Thoughts 2
Poem No. 26
Do you know why she’s afraid of him –
where the morbid dance with the truth,
grips her senses at the sight of him –
why she can’t free herself from the truth?
As a creature of light he saw her,
passing from one age to another,
what she was no longer known to her,
into the dance she reluctantly goes.
Savage and sweet dichotomy they long,
linked by fear, hand in hand, light in dark,
through perceptions of what was right and wrong;
why does she tremble with fear at his thought?
Beauty is the Beast, for they are one –
Nearer to each other than they to the one.
Poem No. 27
Something quieter in the brain
speaks of something gentler in the heart,
which shouts of something stronger in
the Soul.
I know the answers not at all,
but now, I know what question to ask.
something sweeter in the smile
speaks of something kinder in the look
which yells of something greater in
the soul.
The Ascension Begins
Poem No. 28
Greatness of form
Comes from the power of meaning.
Mystery is not in the seeing,
Almost never in the performed.
Mystery is in the feeling.
Mystery is in the storm;
In its fleeting,
Find its meaning.
Reason is something power cannot know
No cause can affect the purpose of time
So through the sea of enigmas we go
Looking for something of the ultimate find
The power of expression is the only power we make;
What mystery could be greater than this urge to create.
Poem No. 29
If it be the moon of our destruction,
I saw it rise.
It was full and bold, and beautiful,
And I saw it rise.
Will you pull apart our world
And destroy a million lives?
If so, I saw you rise like Kali herself.[4]
Poem No. 30
In their eyes
I saw a sign
Through the pain and lies
The look that once was mine.
Three children and a man
Six eyes fixed on a tree
Three minds had to keep calm
With the excitement they see.
In that place
The glow touched me
With the wonderful grace
Of the child in me.
When Christmas was no more than the greatest day of the year,
Nothing but gifts galore, when magic could rule without fear.
~
[1] These are presented sequentially from the calendar year in which I was twenty-two years old. That means several of the early ones (up to No. 6) were written before my birthday in February, and thus when I was still twenty-one.
[2] I believe this is my coming out poem, although it’s hard to remember precisely. But I do know my poetic voice went quiet after I decided to be real with myself. Up to that moment, poetry had been a way to let the tensions out arising from being closeted; afterwards, the urge to write seemed purposeless. There is a time gap from this poem to next of 40 days.
[3] Rodney M. Winfield (1925-2017), an instructor of mine at Maryville University. See here: http://rodneywinfield.com/Home.html
The poem deals with a neglected prop I spied in the figure drawing studio: an 18th century burled walnut bracket case with doors and glass intact, but no movements. I suppose one day I asked Rodney if he knew anything about it, and he said it was his. He’d used it for a prop sometimes, but purchased it in the 1950s to do some art project with. I said it would be a shame to do anything with it, as it was beautiful as is. He then gave it to me with a wistful glint in his eye. It looked out of place in my dorm room, but I soon took it home. It rather looked like this one: http://cdn.og-cdn.com/img/1248845/small-18th-century-style-bracket-clock.jpg
RIP, Rodney. Thank you.
[4] Iben Browning made a prediction that an 'earthquake window' would open for the New Madrid fault in the United States due to stresses caused by the pull of the moon. His window opened on December first and closed on the fifth. See here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Madrid_Seismic_Zone#Iben_Browning.27s_1990_prediction
In a rare case of recall, I actually remember writing this poem. I was taking the family car to the mechanics, and as I waited, evening bloomed, and there was the full moon.
For those of you who know of my interest in Famous-Barr, I also remember being in the flagship store downtown the next day and looking around the candy counter section. I was thinking all the people rushing about might have their lives changed very soon, that is, if Mr. Browning's predictions came to pass, which they did not.
_
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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