Thursday 30 November 2023

One Poem by David Parsley

 



 

What the Future Dares

 

… till the Future dares / Forget the Past,… 
Adonais: An Elegy on the Death of John Keats,”

Percy Bysshe Shelley, 1821 

 

Didn’t you wonder why it never fluttered or moved
when the wind blew?
 

“The Last Leaf,” O. Henry 

 

It wasn’t about Behrman’s masterpiece 
or petals from the sick child’s flower, 
nor what the girl from Kansas found 
in the dusty back yard where real leaves 
darken and drop in packaged rainbows. 

Some few tout expired courtesies
 
shifting with Alvin and Whitey, the boy  
who could not run as fast as his fellow,  
porches posing bare ruined choirs 
where late the latch key hides  
unlooked-for tyrannies among the stuff. 

It preceded a resumed cowardice 
poising us high on boards of water 
to surrender the hard won liberties. 
Such betrayals have always chased us 
hand in hand from pluming towers 
on descents for later repudiation. 

When the planes returned still pregnant 
human cargo, attendant baggage, fire,  
did upper reaches of the self-made labyrinth 
sense fingers trace to world’s oblivious center 
trailing shadows in art colony, belfry, slum, 
entrance to subways’ prophetic walls? 

They who passed above our non-plus 
entered that oblivion a defining wave 
of prey to revealed contagion planted 
in common furrow to our sustaining 
works and charities, craft, invention, cures 
for cancers, tau-mediated degeneration. 

Clear forensic eludes.  At Krajina, 
Glasgow, Cairo, and Tashkent,  
the black sites render inventive wrongs: 
the forgetting in our darker dares coupled
 
with smoke bled orchestrated immolations 
to leave us rocking spectators agape 
never-agains that haunt but not compel. 

Absent depone, the immolators emerged 
striding mists prefiguring such plumes 
with diminutives banned the learning places  
offering throats to goalish stanchions,
stones drawn from a hundred hands
 
erupt of rain to wash our culpable extremes. 

Such excess tempts more forgiveness 
than found at Gettysburg and Shiloh 
reversing the rituals of desecration 
when dispatch to rightful station 
presaged approaching railway escort 
to gas chamber and killing field. 

It is here the daring flickers brightest 
through the discredited inmost veil 
threatening to torch creation’s face 
with Dream tales shaping civility 
through our disobedience. 

Then crowd shining eyes to memorial steps
as less tremulous word goes forth
 
finding time and place at Washington, 
Tiananmen, Sabarmati Ashram,
Cairo again
, now thawing in wind
 
arrived from lift of Tunisian night. 

Generations ascend from their knowing 
to relearn the debt ceiling of intolerance 
adjacent the other jostling blunders waiting 
to append fresh bubbles and crashes, 
pyramids and labor towns, catastrophic 
alliances with their ruined streets. 

Blameless we assure sidestep of specicide,
of killing fogs, mustard hued precipitation, 
fresh eboli sprung from canister or thicket, 
mushrooming gales on waves of light.
With dam and inoculation, popular fiat, web,
 
kinetic kills, daunting ducts and bridges, 
we thwart such contest to our sovereignty.

These number deeds like star voyages.
Though through genomic
probings  
man should breathe the breath of lion, 
take on knowledge of scorpion,
 
wisdom that is asp, we fear not 
advent of that strange and other soul. 

Then may human reach to dust 
and inscribe her perfected image, 
speaking her Watson, new Deep Mind.
Then could human breathe to Not
 
the currents that may or not be soul. 

In that ecumenical hour of awakening,
dull gaze lifted as from sickbed confusion,
what dread hand or eye will move 
through gusts and any height demanded,
 
with brush or finger settle leaf among 
brittle vinery, myrtle, or yew so fixed 
it should neither tremble nor fall? 

 

David Parsley is an engineer/manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory where he works during the day (okay, and some nights and weekends) on interplanetary probes and rovers. In addition to Lothlorien Poetry Journal, his poems appear in London Grip, Poetry LA, Tiny Seed Literary Journal, Autumn Sky Poetry, Poetry Panorama, and other journals and anthologies.

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