One might, in the future
Posit that poetry was my religion.
It was not.
Rather, I used poetry as a vessel
To establish—by two or three witnesses—
What was true.
First, my knowledge came from the Bible.
And often poetry—even wicked or not—
Would affirm the teachings I find in scripture.
It may be the ugliness of Communism
Or the reality of communication.
But, great poetry foreshadowed
The truth;—
It proved truth could be found.
It did not supplement my religion.
It, rather—even if professing not to—
Confirmed it.
Because what was often on the pages
Did work.
More often than not, our most flagrant Atheists,
In their poetry, were prophets.
More than in essays
The poem had predicted and far surpassed
All other human inovations
By showing us where our race would end.
Because it was dreams;—
Poetry is vision.
Whether a demon or a saint
The poets had foretasted, eerily,
Every major change in history
In principle, and they did this
By understanding the passing bodies of knowledge
Established throughout time and space—
Captured in the portraits of literature.
Poems are prophetic
Because they built off of the other great poets
To see more clearly a vision
And to make less opaque
The future.
As Keats noted, the future is…
We poets are rather windows to it.
The radical is the catalyst to it;
And often radicals find in poetry
A formula for their own success.
I, I, liked to merely understand it
What all was in my limited grasp to understand.
However… I would also like to preserve my right to do so
Which is why my poetry was written.
Not to change the world, but to simply preserve
This freedom of man to see glimpses of the future.
I love this. A feeling I’ve always had, put to perfect words. Thank you.
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You’re welcome! This is the greatest gift an author can have, is someone really appreciating his craft. Thank you!
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