Adam's job description
included oversight
of all the animals,
but it is said
that one by one
he forgot the names
of all of them,
and one by one
with each forgetting
the forgotten died.
He should have been
the naturalist
par excellence,
the model for us all,
the archetypal
conservationist.
Our failure is not his.
Ours is much the greater.
We have not even seen,
much less forgotten,
nor even given names to
(names we could forget)
multitudes of life forms,
great and small.
We kill them sight unseen,
we burn their habitats
in darkness and in shame,
make life impossible
for those who hold -
it's highly probable -
the gift of life for us.
Popular Posts
-
The moon petals the sea. Rose petals the sea. Stone sea. Stone petals. Rose petals of stone. Stone rising before me. Sea moves. How moves...
-
It all depends, you see, how you go about it. And that I cannot tell you, for that will be dictated by you and by you knowing your friends...
-
extract from the poem Koi by John Burnside All afternoon we've wandered from the pool to alpine beds and roses ...
-
Hello everyone who follows David King (My Father). On behalf of the family this post is to let you know that Dad sadly passed away, peacefu...
-
The image below was sent to me in an email. It is obviously doing the rounds, so you may have seen it. It is the sunset at the North Pole wi...
16 comments:
I am frankly in awe of the heft, intention ,meaning ,bearing, conception ,execution and balance of this perfect poem, Dave!
Aloha from Waikiki
Comfort Spiral
> < } } ( ° >
><}}(°>
< ° ) } } > <
This reminds me of Heathland Fire again. It was not Adam's fault and not because of sin but guilty. So sad...
Humankind definitely is guilty as charged, Dave!
killing them sight unseen is much easier...names make it more personal...the forgetting the names by adam was symbolic of that for me...nice write dave...
DAve,
Adam without Eve being mentioned? If Eve is not factored in can Adam survive long! But he did! Amazing!
Hank
Oh yes. This one packs a punch.
This one really resonates with me---it is our responsibility to share the world, but we don't like sharing.
For some reason I feel that the highest moment of this great poem is in the parenthesis ( names we could forget ) which again for some reason reminds me of Eliot's: "distracted from distraction by distraction..."
The last stanza rings true for me :-)
Wonderful overall drive toward the measured conclusion, for me it's the first and third stanzas that really stand out. I like that the stance in these is slightly more oblique.
powerful statement - I like the comparison to the biblical tale.
Cloudia
Wow! This is the sort of comment one doesn't expect to get, but when you do, it reminds you why you blog! Thanks so much!
haricot
Yes, but sadness is turning into tragedy.
Mary
Thanks for the feedback.
Brian
Good point, that. Thanks.
kaukuala
I wonder how he would have survived without her - or wouldn't he?
Kass
Thanks a lot. Glad you think so.
Hannah
That is a very valid take on the problem, I think. Thank you for making it.
Tommaso
This makes for an interesting critique. Thank you for it.
Windsmoke
Thank you for passing that on.
Titus
Appreciate this comment very much. Thank you for it.
Sheila
Thank you very much. Good to know.
Right on, as they say, spot on. Terrible what we are doing, and you capture very well. K.
So I guess that would make Noah the first conservationist. Now if only he'd remembered those damn unicorns.
So true - we don't understand fully what we're destroying.
The truth in this poem is almost painful.
Perhaps it's time we humans realised we aren't the centre of the Universe after all!
Thought provoking and powerfully moving, Dave.
Post a Comment