Wednesday, March 2, 2011

It Is a Tragic Thing

Man is drunken
Yet thirsting still for stronger potions.
The wines of milder vintage
Mellowed by love and beauty
Cannot intoxicate the mind that has tasted
The liquor of its own inverted power.

Mind is master;
Yet eyes dimmed by cataracts of greed
Can see no signposts of the Master Mind
Nor torches of the avatars
That flame disaster;
Ears tuned only to earthly kingdoms
Hear not the guiding carillons of angels.

Ceaselessly, triumphantly,
With merciless, sword-thin laughter,
Man builds his slaves--
Robots with the strength of Atlas
Purring annihilation
Forgetting that he, himself,
May be food for his own mind's gorging.

It is a tragic thing
When man lights the fuse
Of the bomb that will level his own house.
Would he but look up,
He might walk with Gods and travel by star
To the kingdoms of forever.

The Relief Society Magazine
Second in MFCP Clinic Poems, Spring 1953