Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Beware Woeful Wisdom

I'll be back to write more in this soon. I'm sure I'll need a break from the paper I'm working on right now. It's about desire and capitalism and advertising and it's proving to have many unruly angles and I'm viewing it through a lens that is stuck at just-out-of-focus.

I haven't really done any school work in days. But if you've read this for very long or happen to actually know me, you'll realize that isn't really news.

In the mean time, here's a poem a Cafe-friend shared with me:

Unwise Purchases
by George Bilgere
They sit around the house
Not doing much of anything: the boxed set
Of the complete works of Verdi, unopened.
The complete Proust, unread:
The French-cut silk shirts
Which hang like expensive ghosts in the closet
And make me look exactly
Like the kind of middle-aged man
Who would wear a French-cut silk shirt:
The reflector telescope I thought would unlock
The mysteries of the heavens
But which I only used once or twice
To try to find something heavenly
In the window of the high-rise down the road,
And which now stares disconsolately at the ceiling
When it could be examining the Crab Nebula:
The 30-day course in Spanish
Whose text I never opened,
Whose dozen cassette tapes remain unplayed,
Save for Tape One, where I never learned
Whether the suave American
Conversing with a sultry-sounding desk clerk
At a Madrid hotel about the possibility
Of obtaining a room,
Actually managed to check in.
I like to think
That one thing led to another between them
And that by Tape Six or so
They’re happily married
And raising a bilingual child in Seville or Terra Haute.
But I’ll never know.
Suddenly I realize
I have constructed the perfect home
For a sexy, Spanish-speaking astronomer
Who reads Proust while listening to Italian arias,
And I wonder if somewhere in this teeming city
There lives a woman with, say,
A fencing foil gathering dust in the corner
Near her unused easel, a rainbow of oil paints
Drying in their tubes
On the table where the violin
She bought on a whim
Lies entombed in the permanent darkness
Of its locked case
Next to the abandoned chess set,
A woman who has always dreamed of becoming
The kind of woman the man I’ve always dreamed of becoming
Has always dreamed of meeting,
And while the two of them discuss star clusters
And Cézanne, while they fence delicately
In Castilian Spanish to the strains of Rigoletto,
She and I will stand in the steamy kitchen,
Fixing up a little risotto,
Enjoying a modest cabernet,
While talking over a day so ordinary
As to seem miraculous.

Side note: I'm also working on a terribly long essay about empire and church and life and practice and... well, you know, "stuff." I'm worried it might inspire me to do something abundant. I mean, I have always wondered what it would be like...
Don't worry, I won't post it here.

2 comments:

Bryan Lake Portland Oregon said...

Well, whatever you're working on, please DO post it here. I read your blog, dude. I like your stuff. Keep it coming.

Lildonbro said...

:) I really like that!