The Ghent Review Volume1, Number 1, summer 2016 | Page 17

hence shadows dark and deep (o who will sing the deeper dark?) (and does the light originate there with darkness round a star rendering it visible?) I have seen have seen and heard and heard also the swan’s lonesome cry and known that the dark and light embrace each other constantly of which I am a believer (this heritage embraces all things even unto imagining history as a visible transcript ripe for transposition) all this like the ever-lasting core of a Greek play pertinent to our time a flame which indicates a fire the light and the dark also rouse! rouse the flame! nor a temporal admonishment satisfy us in our working days nor only the moon be our witness though we have witnessed the moon do flame and mill conspire against or with us are we within the maze without a thread or do we spin from our guts the means of escape who are intruder and Minotaur alike? source-domain out of which a chorus whispers its lauds and laments through the vine we pluck our fruit from and the over-shadowing sky overshadowing us as we sing “O Icarus I see you ascending O Icarus I see you fall” and if we do not sing who will? so come let us harvest the sun and the moon flame-roused as we are by their brightness flame-roused as El Greco was in the storm above Toledo city I have walked in down cobble streets that might be hometown cast in southern light his figures and dreams before me a reality equal to any which might be cast against it a testament to the light which spun it