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Mysterium Tremendum
The realm of the imaginery is not a strange region situated beyond this world; it is the world itself...grasped and realized in its entirety...the literature of action is far more deceitful. -Maurice Blanchot, The Gaze of Orpheus and Other Literary Essays, P.A. Sitney, editor, Station Hill Press, 1981, p.36.
Why would I want to describe what I saw tonight when you can see it on TV with a music background and twice the intensity of visual acuity? It was really quite an ordinary scene, one I’d seen a thousand times in the night sky and along the park where I walked leisurely. Why would I bother writing it all down, turning the visible into some kind of invisible, inner smouldering around a breath of thought? My essential precariousness, fragility, gentleness, like a bee searching out the honey of an invisibility and storing it in a golden hive where temporary perishables are imprinted on my soul quietly, with my personal stamp, where an essence is resurrected in me, perhaps forever; where a silent inwardness aspires, searches and recalls, transmuting past into present. For a time, truth palpitates and time is reborn from its ashes in mysterious flashes of luminosity and a deep, dense vastness motions in an intermittent simultaneity. For this brief moment poetry condenses out of the flying vapours of the world; a private sphere forms, is ordered, out of the public chaos of airy nothing: shape, habitation and a name is given to the frenzied and frenetic dashing of the eye. And all that world comes in the door forever: invisible, inaudible, mysterium tremendum. |
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