Grigoriy Myasoyedov |
Autumn On the Land
A man, a field, silence—what is there to say?
He lives, he moves, and the October day
Burns slowly down.
History is made
Elsewhere; the hours forfeit to time's blade
Don't matter here. The leaves large and small,
Shed by the branches, unlamented fall
About his shoulders. You may look in vain
Through the eyes' window; on his meagre hearth
The thin, shy soul has not begun its reign
Over the darkness. Beauty, love and mirth
And joy are strangers there.
You must revise
Your bland philosophy of nature, earth
Has of itself no power to make men wise.
R. S. Thomas
I go over it - reading it again, hoping I will find a different conclusion.
Something more hopeful.
The man, the field, and the silence.
That silence gapes.
Meaningless! It's all empty. Even the beauty of Nature has no influence, no redeeming power.
But what is this - a sliver of hope? "The thin, shy soul has not begun its reign/Over the darkness."
How does one begin, then? Where?
First there was the Book of Nature then came the book of scripture. They compliment each other, and upon careful observation of the first, it leads seamlessly to the following.
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