Oracular, or Delphi at its Worst*

Oracular, or Delphi at its Worst*

In Homer’s time no word existed for

Art.  Praxitiles and Sappho had no term

For it. The Greeks had not even the spore

Of such a word, so Plato spoke no firm

Ideals about that thing which we call art.

He had too much, perhaps, to say about

The worth of poetry.  It hit the heart

Too truly for his liking, made him pout

That it was not as clear as thinking in

Philosophy, and made him fearful of

Its purpose and effects—far too like skin.

Some lines might sing like snake tongues touching love.

..Verse might be beautiful as wine dark eyes

….Or toxic in appeal to those not wise.

* “The Greeks had no word to denote those activities that we now subsume under the term ‘art’.” ~ Penelope Murray, Plato on Poetry, p. 1