Wednesday, October 14, 2009

In the Beginning

For those of you in Sabrina Mark's class, I found a great Creation Myth poem by Dylan Thomas. I've recently become engrossed in Thomas's second-nature verse-thinking. He has an, I think, unparalleled handle on poetry. He wrote in a crowning world of free verse, but his vast lexicon-of-a-mind allowed him to find novel uses of rhymed verse. Dylan Thomas has forced me to think long and hard about whether free verse indeed frees poetry from some kind of formal fetter, as it were, or from a worthwhile responsibility. - John

In the Beginning

In the beginning was the three-pointed star,
One smile of light across the empty face;
One bough of bone across the rooting air,
The substance forked that marrowed the first sun;
And, burning ciphers on the round of space,
Heaven and hell mixed as they spun.

In the beginning was the pale signature,
Three-syllabled and starry as the smile;
And after came the imprints on the water,
Stamp of the minted face upon the moon;
The blood that touched the crosstree and the grail
Touched the first cloud and left a sign.

In the beginning was the mounting fire
That set alight the weathers from a spark,
A three-eyed, red-eyed spark, blunt as a flower;
Life rose and spouted from the rolling seas,
Burst in the roots, pumped from the earth and rock
The secret oils that drive the grass.

In the beginning was the word, the word
That from the solid bases of the light
Abstracted all the letters of the void;
And from the cloudy bases of the breath
The word flowed up, translating to the heart
First characters of birth and death.

In the beginning was the secret brain.
The brain was celled and soldered in the thought
Before the pitch was forking to a sun;
Before the veins were shaking in their sieve,
Blood shot and scattered to the winds of light
The ribbed original of love.

- Dylan Thomas

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