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This blog ran for more than two years with no graphics--and it received about 50 page views. I was advised to add graphics; after seeing the huge public that followed blogs dedicated to homoerotic images, I decided to use that kind. The result was a dramatically increased number of monthly page views, and the number has remained fairly steady. Most of the images were found on the internet; although they are assumed to be in the public domain, they are identified as far as possible. They are exhibited under the Fair Use protections of United States copyright law: their function is simply to attract readers to the poems--I receive no economic benefit from them or from the blog. Nevertheless, they will be removed if they are copyrighted and the owner so desires. 1260 x 290

POEMAS EN ESPAÑOL -- 2009: January 8, April 12, August 3 . . . . 2010: January 13 . . . . 2013: June 30, November 28, December 8 . . . . 2014: September 25, November 30 . . . . 2015: July 9, October 22 . . . . 2016: February 12, August 1, December 28 . . . . 2017: March 2, September 5 . . . . 2018: May 10, July 15, November 3 . . . . 2019: August 4, December 5 . . . . 2020: December 1 . . . . 2021: October 12, December 3 . . . . 2022: April 15, June 21 . . . . 2023: January 3, April 2, May 9, June 6.

Sunday, May 24, 2020

AT BALZAC’S MONUMENT



       I turned the corner. At my approach,
       Balzac, you rose before me like a ghost
       of unquiet conscience—as in a slow
       up-pouring of volcanic force
       arrested in the stillness of this place
       to stand as if blasted by Gods eye of wrath
       and weathered into desert stone
       like Lots wife at her turning back
       toward the destruction of her city.
       I stopped, astounded by
       your gouged eyes, staring forever,
       the stumps of your severed hands—
       signs of the immortal martyrdom
       awarded by an implacable art
       for having gazed too long at the obscene
       spectacle of our stupidity.

       —Thus the sentence. But on whom,
       you or us, has the judgment come?
       The answer, if there is one, bides
       within the sunlight and torrential
       silence that clothe you.
       And in your keeping still your vigil
       over this old French city of small souls.




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       Photo from   bluffton .edu/~sullivanm/rodin/balzac.html

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