A Glowing Untruth; Dismissing; Forget the Smoothed Out Slopes of Diadumenos : A Trinity of Sonnets

               A Glowing Untruth

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

The Christians and the Jews and Muslims, not

To mention Hindus, Buddhists and the . . . rest,

Have failed to tell us in exactly what

Sweet ankh-shaped space the soul has made its blest

Sanctorum.  (That’s because there is no soul.)

Some say the ancient thought of Egypt placed

The soul within the eye with sacred kohl

Around its holy habitation.  Traced

Around the pharaonic wraith-blank eye

Of King Tutankhamun lay precious blue

Stone rims of reverenced lapis lazuli.

Perhaps this ritualed placement whispers true. . .

   An emptiness behind the pupils might

      Speak,  pure,  about this non-existent light.

Phillip Whidden

                              Dismissing

 

 

If then the soul exists within the eye

And makes in it its sacred cave, the face

Must show the eye full-on and never shy

Away to looking elsewhere.  Held in grace

Of lapis lazuli the iris stares

Out straight aside, and does not look away

Towards eternity.  The pupil glares

At you.  That center will not look astray

At concepts in philosophy.  The gaze

Stays fixed on you.  Eight thousand years it waits

And in the moment that you pass . . . it . . . weighs . . .

You . . . helplessly.  It ponders flimsy fates.

This sideways straightness you cannot deflect.

It silently disdains your intellect.

Forget the Smoothed Out Slopes of Diadumenos

When Botticelli drew firm lines around

Smooth swirls of form beside pale foam, the power

Of ancient Egypt felt itself recrowned.

Those lines appeared again from in that hour

When images were outlined, carved on walls,

Flesh shapes so closed in borders that they could

Not be confused with nature.  In the halls

Of art where priests paced through the fatherhood

Of certitude in faith, the muscled skin

Of figures was contained by timeless times.

The certainty portrayed was set within

These formal strictures, clarity like chimes.

  This orthodox exactitude banned doubt

    By firmness like a king’s lips’ golden pout.

Phillip Whidden