THE CALM

We are ourselves the incomprehensible closest to ourselves. Jean-Luc Marion

Work-in-progress

The mirror she saw

shine on the tide reappeared—

I see it myself.

I’m looking out and

seeing what raised her questions—

we had disagreed

about narcicism.

I see myself in that calm

tonight and wonder

if she also saw

the incomprehensible

thatness that we share.

THE CALM

STILL HOUSE COVE

We must finally take seriously the fact that “I is another.” Jean-Luc Marion

Low sun, rising tide

gurgling in the riprap, out

here by myself where

we sat last night, your

laughter behind your strong hand.

Shy with each other,

present in the flesh,

we thought through our next moves as

the moon was rising.

STILL HOUSE COVE

THE NAME

work-in-progress

”The name is not said by us; it is the Name that calls us.” Jean-Luc Marion

This moonless, starless

night, I sit by the bay, hear

the waves break, and think.

Or so I think. No

thoughts appear. I am stone cold

as the stone I sit

on. The names for God

fade. I’m in the paradox,

the peace of the waves.

THE NAME

UNWINDING

Infant cries, insect

cries. The last days of summer.

The light of day dims

on a single swan

out on the bay. You

drive out here from work. Your young

flesh glows as you sit

quietly, eyes closed.

I’ve watched you all summer un-

wind as I unwind.

UNWINDING

LAST CHANCE

“Flesh assigns me to myself without any possible return…” Jean-Luc Marion, In Excess, 96.

I am rather worse

for wear. A little blind, a

little lame: without

you I’d lose my mind.

Allow an old man one last

chance at the good life.

No need to make things

up. You are the gift of flesh

that makes me me, in

solitude, in hope.

This world’s a fine place now with

you in it with me.

Love your children, love

the others that glad your life.

My small, perfect world.

LAST CHANCE

PUBLIC GARDEN

Leaves sigh overhead.

Stretched out on the public lawn,

couples speak low or

not at all. The last

days of summer gather us

as in years past. With

our backs to the sun

we look out on dark waters.

We hear the gulls call

from eternity.

The world suffers our wild dreams

in its patient gaze.

PUBLIC GARDEN

ODE TO LIGHT

“…the miracle brings to light the limits of what I build as my world.” Jean-Luc Marion “Believing in Order to See” p. 90

August dusk, low tide

there’s only one swan preening,

its long neck shimmers

the last one? The cove

will swarm with multitudes on

the last day, some say

or Parmenides:

the wide-eyed moon, spotless sun,

light a foreigner

(Bringhurst translator).

So as dusk falls, WHAT IS is

here, Narragansett

ODE TO LIGHT

NOTE

Work-in-progress

August dusk, low tide

there’s only one swan preening

its long neck shimmers

The last one? The cove

will swarm with multitudes on

the last day, some say

or Parmenides:

the wide-eyed moon, spotless sun,

light a foreigner,”

(Brinkhurst, translator)

so as dusk falls, WHAT IS is

in Narragansett.

NOTE