Tuesday, January 10, 2012

The Math to Everything

They say there’s a math to poetry that the math men know nothing about.  There’s a math to the universe that will tell why the sky is blue, and blood is scarlet, and the sea changes from black to green to white.  It explains why trees have leaves, and why leaves have lines, and why there are so many or so few.  It explains why the world is a circle when gold grows in squares, the mountains are pointed, and people are almost like stars. Not only does it tell why each rock rests exactly where it does, why each tree sprouted exactly where it grows, and why this grass blade is as dark as a forest while its brother is brown as the sand—but it tells why all of this together, with the white touching the blue touching the brown, black, and green, is more beautiful than anything that could have come from a palette or pencil.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Now I Know

When I was taken outside for the very first time, I saw the sun and it burned holes into my eyes, and the pain filled them with tears.  But now I can see the grass in the ground, and how the green springs from the brown, but only slowly.  Now I know that the roads are smooth and wet when they start, but as they grow old they harden, and crack when the earth shakes.  Now I know that the bats swoop in the dark to catch bugs in their mouths, which they smelled with their ears.  I know that things like honey and webs can be made, but only after hours of hard work—and that things like cardboard and metal are often used in place of wood and stone.  I know now that pigeons gather where the people gather, and that giant squids stay where no one will go.  I know there are indeed flies made of fire, and of butter, and horses and houses and deer.  I know that hummingbirds really don't know how to hum, and that beetles secretly have wings.  I know that when the sky is bright and blue, millions of bright lights are hidden from view, and they only appear after darkness has fallen.  And I know that as things grow old, they begin to die—even the stars—and that the only thing capable of growing young again, though it often doesn't, is the human heart.