But Perhaps Keats Understood It at His Best

But Perhaps Keats Understood It at His Best

Modern poetry  modern verse  contemporary poetry  contemporary verse  modern poem  contemporary poem

“The Pure Present which so often aroused Goethe’s admiration in every product of the classical life and in sculpture particularly, fills that life with an intensity that is to us perfectly unknown.”  ~  Spengler, The Decline of the West, Introduction

Perfection fails to be that boring thing
Romantics so desired Ideals to be.
That Byron and that Shelley loved to sing
Of beauty is enough for us to see
The truth.  Molasses on a cloth of gold
Was what their spilling characters revealed.
They never stood in front of perfect old
White marble statues and were never healed
By perfect balance of the muscles of
Male shoulders, hips, and thighs, or by the curve
Of carved white goddess breasts so shaped like love
That even Plato might have lost reserve.
..There is a purity so grave, intense,
….And utter it becomes the rule, immense.