Unknown |
Anenome
In the
meadow the anemone
is
creaking open to the dawn.
By
noon, the sky’s polyphony
will
flood her white lap till she drowns.
The
tiny muscle in her star
is
tensed to open to the All,
yet the
daylight’s blast so deafens her
she
barely heeds the sunset’s call
or
finds the willpower to refurl
her
petal-edges – her, the power
and
will of how many other worlds.
In our
violence, we outlive her.
But
which new life will see us flower
and
face the skies, as true receivers?
Rilke
“The
sky’s polyphony.” I had to look that up to make sure I had it right. Polyphony
= ‘the style of simultaneously combining a number of parts, each forming an
individual melody and harmonizing with each other”. So does that make the
anenome like an open ear? Is she listening to the music of the spheres? Rilke
calls her a star, so that makes her an earth-star receiving messages from a
sky-star. And though delicate, she takes everything in, something we “in our
violence” don’t do though we outlive her. The thing that speaks to me most is
the question whether we also can flower and become “true receivers.” It's against our nature to receive. We want to act, accomplish, conquer –
hence our “violence”. But the anenome shows us that a life of beauty, though
breathtakingly short and fragile, is in fully opening ourselves, listening, and
receiving. Can we do it? Rilke doesn’t know.