Tuesday, 16 April 2024

Five Poems by Royal Rhodes

 



HAFIZ --  A MYSTIC PATH

 

Yes, the verse of Rumi and Attar

insists our one desire is finding love,

what happens when the soul awakes: a star

is born and moonlight floods our every move.

God delights you tried to be a saint.

That terror, like the ocean's undertow,

the diving deep in God where others faint,

let you meet the Friend whose name you know,

erasing fear. Such laughter sounds like lightning,

finds your heart in no protected place.

Darkness in the mind and limbs is brightening,

when broken clouds reveal the longed-for Face.

Life's profoundly useless riddles show

Hafiz the way to paths the heart must go.


 

LITTLE BUDDHA

 

The little stone Buddha

sits meditatively

waist-high in maple leaves.

The body is a tree.

His head is capped

with snail-like curls

as wisdom extends

the skull's soft top.

Half-closed eyes

take one look at a time

and then let each go.

Parted lips smile

as if knowing something

like Mona Lisa,

reflected in the red line

of the morning horizon

the image takes in

forever facing East.

 

 

MEALS IN SILENT MEDITATION

 

we dine in silence

facing windows, without words

nature speaks volumes

 

keep silence with friends

allow God some quiet days

and then eternity

 

even while eating

is a chance to be present

chewing silence slowly

 

a self-serve supper tray  --

toasted-cheese sandwich and soup,

while grace is the side dish

 

monks knead and bake the bread

a sign in the kitchen claims

as we bring the stones for soup


 

SADHU

 

I sit within the burning ground  --

clothed in cloudless sky  --

both hell and paradise are here.

 

At night the pale, anaemic moon

whitewashes all my limbs,

as if ashes cooling from the pyre.

 

Death remains so close at hand.

Others contemplate it as if distant

while the heat of curiosity is calling.

 

This dying animal that lives in me

is like a painted still life posed,

imitating nature's slow decay of life.

 

Beside me death awaits in silence,

the way someone who hurt you

remains the one you love and want.

 

In that place a thousand deaths

have stopped my breath in ecstasy.

This pointless pain becomes a folding star.

 

But do not speak. Say only nothing --

in this incinerated heart I feel

that purest conflagration turn to beauty.

 


RUMI AND THE CAGED POEMS



It took a prophet or a friend of God
for us to find truth in a poet's
book of heroic couplets.
And a translator's mentor,
comparing an older version,
demanded: "Release them
from their cages." Do it.
Do not hesitate a blink,
like those who failed to loose
the tiger in the Baghdad zoo.
The poems behind iron bars,
like young men naked
in piles while wearing collars
and dog leashes in photos,
had their eyes blacked out
to keep them anonymous
(as if no one knew them
by their familiar bodies).
But can we at last get rid
of cages? Is there something
in us that longs to grab
the close assembly of bars,
themselves an enchanted world
alive with minerals uttering
a brilliant language to us
or the scent of jasmine blossoms
in a terrain of more value
than we could ever guess?
"Give up the forms," we hear.
Limiting forms and all forms
unbounded, beyond place.
From the shell of our body
we will emerge, sliding
in a creature's silken mucus,
out of the calcified shell
we still haul on our backs.
So the cage, the empty cage,
is where you can find me.


Royal Rhodes is a retired educator who taught courses in global religions for almost forty years. His work has appeared recently in two poetry and art collaborations with artist Claudia Esslinger: Specimens and Reflections, and  Shadows and Imaginings. He has been twice-nominated for this year's Pushcart prize.


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