Wednesday, February 14, 2018

To Urania

When you walk through the door, the world rights itself on its axis.  It is irrevocable.  Things make more sense when you are around.  Something about the way your smile sits over your chin; hips support shoulders and shoulders support a sort of gravitational lens that brings everything into focus.  Like Animaxander’s cylindrical world, wobbling without a point of reference, you right it like some cosmic hand.  Nothing makes sense except in light of you.   Like one of Harlow’s monkeys that never truly got the point, I can see myself wasting a lifetime at some lactating stone colossus.

Maybe things aren’t as bad as all that.  Back during the Jurassic, our distant ancestors made a good living for themselves climbing trees and laying eggs.  Morganocodon didn’t care that an asteroid was coming 70 million years in the future.  Our progenitors just wanted to be happy.  It’s a different kind of happy though, accepting the universe as incomprehensible and life as ultimately pointless.  You are a roadmap, of sorts. I take off your shirt and trace you to your logical conclusions, your pleasant mammal-ness.


In some fantasy world of my mind, there are twin statues of us, embracing in a marble temple.  This is the love we have built between our two souls; the storms weathered, promises kept, rants carefully listened to, ledges stepped back from.  Finally, after centuries in the dark, starlight, clean and bright, shines through the glass of the observatory dome above.  Its spring and from a dozen different archways, a flower-scented breeze brings the pneuma from a thousand verdant worlds.