7.27.2010

Eleven- Archibald MacLeish

And summer mornings, the mute child, rebellious,
Stupid, hating the words, the meaning, hating
The Think now, Think, the Oh but Think!
On tiptoe the three chairs on the verandah
And crossing tree by tree the empty lawn
Push back the shed door and upon the sill
Stand pressing out the sunlight from his eyes
And enter and with outstretched fingers feel
The grindstone and behind it the bare wall
And turn and in the corner on the cool
Hard earth sit listening. And one by one,
Out of the dazzled shadow in the room
The shapes would gather, the brown plowshare, spades,
Mattocks, the polished helves of picks, a scythe
Hung from the rafters, shovels, slender tines
Glinting across the curve of sickles--shapes
Older than men were, the wise tools, the iron
Friendly with earth, And sit there, quiet, breathing
The harsh dry smell of withered bulbs, the faint
Odor of dung, the silence. And outside
Beyond the half-shut door the blind leaves
And the corn moving. And at noon would come,
Up from the garden, his hard crooked hands
Gentle with earth, his knees still earth-stained, smelling
Of sun, of summer, the old gardener, like
A priest, like an interpreter, and bend
Over his baskets.
And they would not speak:
They would say nothing. And the child would sit there
Happy as though he had no name, as though
Like a root growing---

7.26.2010

Are Beards Weird?


I'm not sure if it's because I've become an adult recently and have a newfound respect for symbols of maturity, but I think I really appreciate men with facial hair. It used to be the ultimate demonstration of manliness; if you had a beautiful mustache and a wiry beard, you had respect among your fellow men. We seem to be all about the mane these days, which is equally important, but I just want to commend all of you fellows who are struggling with the desire to break out and let your manliness flourish. The truth is-you do look older, wiser, and more distinguished. It can hide double chins and accentuate chiseled jawlines. It can be the perfect accessory to complete your rugged, lumberjack style. It could bring out your gorgeous, deep eyes. It could set you apart from all the other guys; it may keep some girls away, but your a real man, and you need a real woman in your life to appreciate your manliness, right? One warning, however, is if your facial hair isn't quite at the point where its thick enough to showcase, don't chance it. Men with more experienced, fuller beards may make fun of you. If you keep working on it, and it is your passion to have the ultimate facial hair, you one day could be the supreme depiction of manliness. Like this man in Hastings, his beard was one I just couldn't ignore. Food for thought.

7.25.2010

Gifts of Inspiration


Nature can be one of God's greatest gifts of inspiration to man. Men would gaze upon the enormous trees of Lebanon and find great inspiration for construction of monuments and buildings that would achieve equal height and status. Or poets, whose introverted minds would ponder the beauty of wild gardens, endlessly rapt, would therefore produce some of the most profound pieces of literature people try to emulate today. And the musicians; how many men would see some trinket of beauty in that expansive treasure chest we call nature and produce some melody and song worthy of angels ears? So, in Hastings, England- I came across this gorgeous tree, tangled at the roots with a vine who slowly tried to suck out its nutrients- and I thought to myself, what men have you inspired? Perhaps my mind will gravitate towards that memory of this tree, and produce something worthy of its inspiration; or, perhaps not. The point is, if its a beautiful day, and you feel like being inspired, using whatever medium you are best in, go out and spend a little time with nature.

Stepping in Puddles, I Come to This -Me

Oh to cry when I look at you!
I rejoice in the components of
A personality thriving, and drink
Into the life of a life well lived.
Beauty costs nothing but is well
Spent on the depths of a tangled soul-
Unkept, dazzling in innocent
Intoxication, Breathe out.

Adjust a tie, slip on a pump heel-
Tis' fascinating how civility covers
The wild and raw, intending to enhance
Art and showcase the life but only
Succeeds in providing contradiction to
The inner breath. Not the primal beat that
Controls physical drive, but the
Lustrous illumination of meaning in a
Complex soul.

Precious are the times we share;
Time as a quantity of brief intimacy.
Golden eras of my life are built up in
Moments of discovering true love,
True hearts, unparalleled ribbons of
Wholesome truth woven into the
Pattern of my existence.
It is partly because of you but mostly
Is the result of what is grander than us.

The revelation, is this.
As I paint my body and my clothes
With droplets falling from the clouds,
Capturing light, I wish to stride and dance-
Breaking out in unbridled motion
As my head fills with musical thoughts
And my heart opens its floodgates.
To understand that I'm not meant to
Understand, to love with feelings
Unnatural to the soil of our foundation,
To escape into a place, gazing and soaking,
Where life flows free because of abounding truth...

And my thoughts come back to you because
You're so much a part of this,
You are so beautiful,
It makes me want to cry.


7.23.2010

Sam Llewellyn



Lyonesse is a fictional book trilogy modeling the traditional story of King Arthur and Camelot but with a very imaginative twist, and a beautiful setting of an older world with sinking ground and dense topography. This book series has become very close to my heart, and with the characters like Idris Limpet and Fisheagle, the journey into this fantastic world attaches to one's mind and grows into a story as adventuresome as life itself. As a tribute to finishing the book, I decided to write this little advertisement for all of you to read it, or at least something of equal fictitious wonder.