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Jon Anderson - Exiled On Mountain, Bewail Fate & Praise Autumn

Now that I'm actually living my solitude I'm clueless.
Every now & then the wind drops in & I look at it.
These are the signs of seasonal change: I'm not sweating,
& the hollow air in the chimney makes a thrumming noise.
The doves outside my house look like they're waiting
at a bus stop & puff into little black & grey pots when
the wind blows or when the rain comes down in columns.
Now that it's quiet in my house I can't really think
without thinking & I can't really talk without meaning
something else, so I shut up. Some days I wish I was
back at the factory, moving heavy objects & grunting.

They start out looking for a handout, then they get used to it,
the birds. What's weird is I think they don't know why
they come anymore, now that I've stopped feeding them.
Frankly, they tend to be undifferentiated & cutely stupid.
Once, when one fell off the wall, I thought I had something,
it was so embarrassed, lying there like a ruffled pompom
with a black tack for a head. Turned out it was dead.
I was so alienated I mailed it back without a stamp, but
I said this prayer for it: Bless every living thing...

I didn't mean to exclude it.

Shortly afterward I was bombed by a traveling flock
of chickadees fresh from a meeting on a rotten stump.
When you're alone every damn word you say has got
to be how you feel, & then you've got to live with it.
I think I'll entertain myself by not experiencing anything.
Word on the mountain is that the wabi of consciousness
is all your living minus all your accumulated experience.
That's why the chickadees attacked, because I'd blown it.

Added: on June 24th, 2007 at 1:04 AM | Viewed: 691 times | Comments and analysis of Exiled On Mountain, Bewail Fate & Praise Autumn by Jon Anderson Comments (1)


Exiled On Mountain, Bewail Fate & Praise Autumn - Comments and Information

Poet: Jon Anderson
Poem: Exiled On Mountain, Bewail Fate & Praise Autumn

Comment 1 of 1, added on June 24th, 2007 at 1:04 AM.

Another good poem, although this is more a narration/story
than a typical poem. But Jon's humour shines through, as in Listen, Leo. I feel the "tongue-in-cheek" attitude quite prevalent.

LJ from Australia

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