by Edgar Bowers1

Before he wrote a poem, he learned the measure

That living in the future gives a farm

Propinquity of mules2 and cows, the charmed

Insouciance3 of hens, the fellowship,

At dawn, of seed-time and of harvest-time.

But when high noon gave way to evening, and

The fences lay, bent4 shadows, on the crops

And pastures to the yellowing trees, he felt

The presences he felt when, over rocks,

Through pools and where it wears the bank, the stream

Ran bright and dark at once, itself its shadow;

And suffered, in all he knew, the antagonists5

Related in the Bible, in himself

And every new condition from the beginning,

As in the autumn leaf and summer prime.

Therefore he chose to live the only game

Worthy6 of repetition, in the likeness7

Of someone like himself, a race of which

He was the changing distances and ground,

The runners, and the goal that runs away

Forever into time; or like two players

At odds8 in white and black, their dignities

Triumphs refused or losses unredeemed.

For the one, that it be ever of the pure

Intention that he witnessed in the high

Stained windows of King's Chapelancestral stories,

The old above the new, like pages shining

From an essential bookhe taught his mind

To imitate the meditation9, sovereign

In verse and prose, of those who shared with him

Intelligence of beauty, good, and truth

As one, unchanging and unchangeable,

Disinterested10 excitement through a sentence

Their joy and passion. For the other, as

A venturer asleep, he went among

The voiceless and unvisionary many

Like one who offers blood to know his fate

Or hold his twin againdeep in the midnight

Baths of New Orleans, on its plural11 beds

And on the secret banks beside its river,

The many who, anonymous12 as he was,

Uncannily re百度竞价推广bled him, appearing

Immortal13 in a finitude of mirrors.

But when the sudden force of the disease

Tossed him, in a new garment, on the bed

Where he had wakened, mornings, as a child

Despised by all the neighbors, helpless, blind

And vulnerable to every life, he listened

Intensely to the roosters, mules and cows

As well as to the voices of the desk,

The chair, the books and pictures, pastures and fields,

The tree of every season, the age of seas

And, on its surge, the age of galaxies14,

The bells within the spires15 of Cambridge, bodies

And faces revealed or hidden in the flow,

All that we knew or could imagine joined

Together in the sound the stream flows through

As witness of itself in every change,

Each trusting in its continuities,

All turning in a final radiant shell.

Then, on his darkened eye, he saw himself

A compact disk awhirl, played by the light

He came from and was ready to reenter,

But not before he chose the way to go.

And so it was, before his death, he spoke16

The poem that is his best, the final letter

To take to that old country as a passport.