Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty

Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty

 

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

“What Keats meant was that the further into beauty we go, the more we make it our own, the more our life is immersed in beauty, the nearer we are to truth.” — R. H. Blyth, ZEN IN ENGLISH LITERATURE, p. 31

 

This pastel thinker thinks like lilies might

If they believed that pistils never die.

He thinks that realms where there is never night

Exist, float perfect and are made of sky

And beauty only where the truth grows, known

As to a Buddha or the Christ.  The far

Pulsations in the constellations sown

Across the universe are like a star

Choir singing all together and do not

Collide, collapse, or eat each other’s hearts.

Such beauties and their truths are never fraught

With Lucifers and rest in nun- drawn charts.

  This doctrine (gorgeous as a burning saint)

    Is flawed by falsehood, thinking’s greatest taint.

Phillip Whidden