(x = space)
x
x
The Way to God
(or, Mystics Are Confounding)
x
God guide us
Does God guide us
Seems
We decide
To take the step
To the right
Or to the left
x
How much is up to us
Why
(and then)
Why
Just about everything
I think
We might want
To go on the path of God
To God
And there might be clues
Insight
Perhaps
Bristly sensation
‘Cause a treasure hunt
If run
And this would be
The richest one
To have
To hoard
Perhaps
(though hoarding really
is no fun)
Better to share
Especially as some of it
Is news
x
But
Come on
Too much is invisible
A code
Without an artifact
Some books that might be changing
And we argue all the time
x
So maybe we hope
For approval
On the way and afterward
Which isn’t gold
But is heaven
That in jazz of virtue
Sometimes perplexing
Ain’t all bad
x
Don’t mean a thing
If it ain’t got that
Je ne se pas
Karl someone said that
(with an “It” as in “It don’t”)
Paas (like eggs)
Haas
Or who is Schickele
A syllable
A couple of Es away
From an adverb
x
Well
Someone
Something
Help us
Please
Maybe a map
On the pages
Or inside a leaf
Inspired (for the books)
By the leaf
That falls
These days
From trees
And set some kind of standard
x
They
Often fall on paths
While one path of the paths
We seek
Who knows
Nature might show the way
Overall
x
Or at least in part
Or parts
Sigh
Where are the arrows
Where is the angel
Pointing
Not much for a duty
But then
One has been assigned
To raise a flaming sword
Outside of Eden
Since the
Lapsarian
Moment
x
So many mysteries
And what we want
Is God-directed
Without mystic
Understanding
(though Ms Underhill
teaches
we all might
have it to use)
x
Well
We find our way
We do our best
Maybe we rather
Act like blocks
Sculpted
Undivinely
Because we favor
Hammers
Of agendas
x
The rest of us
Then
Try
To find a way
To go a way
To find the treasure
Of the Lord
Which is the same
As one who’s somehow
With us
Now
x
C L Couch
x
x
Karl Haas composed and hosted a radio show about Classical music; he was famous for his deeply-intoned greeting, “Hello, everyone.” Peter Schickele also hosted (hosts) a radio show wherein (for the closing) he told us to remember that, “It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that je ne se pas.” (A comic re-rendering of the line (and title) “I don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing” by Duke Ellington.)
Evelyn Underhill was a mystic and writer who composed Practical Mysticism: A Little Book for Normal People.
And may I annotate myself?
x
Photo by Gabriel Jimenez on Unsplash
Ancient Stump
x


Recent Comments