Articles/Essays – Volume 04, No. 3
The Right Size
A landscape lies under the open sky . . .
(Open? The sky’s the limit,
the daylight veil over the illimitable,
withdrawn for revelation from the darkness
beyond of Adam’s first—and longest—nightmare
trying to count quastars telstars from pulstars.
Nth grandson Blaise, a rodent of nocturnal
habit, was apprehensive of a white
owl that at times would swoop—but Blaise would hoot—
in from the eternal silence of those infinite
spaces on Blaise forlornly nibbling at
predestination and incomprehensible
grace. And his terror’s now old Adam’s tedium
sed non laudamus infinitum . . .)
Grace?
Oh yes, it’s day again! All landscapes lie
under a veiling sky. Each one embraces
ten views, each view a hundred sights, each sight
a thousand shapes, each separate shape a million
discriminations made from inward darkness
by instrument, and every single one
some apprehension of infinitude . . .
Leave “lesser fleas,” and take a landscape’s grace!
Bigger than bugs, it’s not the animal
a thousand miles in length that Aristotle
so startlingly invented for rejection.
How big’s the Ding an Sich”? Ansicht? The size
to have a face that we can see as one?
Tired of the burden of things too large or small
or many for the eye, let us confine ourselves
to eyescope. Take the landscape! Te Deum
Incarnatum laudamus, flesh and bone
standing veiled yet revealed through a column of light
shafted more candid down amid the shadow—
smooth boles of ash or beech than this clear morning
of early spring in this glade in this grove,
and with Jehovah, Thy beloved Son;
Who made it all according to Thy Word,
being Himself the Word by which He made it
a garden in a landscape in a world
created to man’s measure for his pleasure.
And yet our landscape lies under a sky
close blue by day but open black at night.
May, 1969.