Thursday, January 12, 2012

ELEPHANTS AND PUGILISTS

There are all manners
of signs
given to hulking beasts
whether the ring is canvassed
and squared, round,
rectangular,
or borderless.
Yet one thing is certain:
feelings precede
(and might even predict)
intelligence.
We might not know,
but our bones do.

Our stage
could be a stage,
or letters
in our fingers
or on a keypad;
it could be notes
that settle
in the flesh
of our inner
or outer
ear that turns
away from us
before we are able
to sing it.
We,
of a certain intelligence
disbelieve and fight
against it,
hoping the opening
will once again assert
and present itself.
We remember
how we danced,
of a certain grace,
able to jab
with precision,
hook and right cross
at will, stayed on our toes
for the full fifteen rounds
and took punches
that no man
had a right to take
and still stand.

Now
we know
what we want to do,
but can't.
A beat slow.
It comes to each
at a different time
and at a different speed,
but it comes
always
all the time.
You fight it,
of course.
Better, I think
to be like the majestic elephant:
a bone feeling
and a walk
to the graveyard
together.
They know
and do not look
unhappy. It's simply
part of it.
They do not want
to make a mess
or feel embarrassed.
If I could,
I'd attach my hand
to one of their tails
and go with them.
Unlike most humans
they have
class.

Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2012

1 comment:

  1. Norm,no doubt, this one is one of your very best. Source of inspiration? (Don't bother;I get it).

    ReplyDelete