http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
Update: (April 23 2016) William Shakespeare - The Bard - died 400 years ago today yet his plays and poetry live on; they are timeless if only because they embrace not only the human condition apropos the individual, but also its universality.
William Shakespeare
As well
as wonderful poetry and great entertainment, Shakespeare’s plays positively
buzz with philosophy.
Yes, ‘The
play’s the thing!’ the Bard has Hamlet say. So what ‘thing’ is that then? To ‘catch
the conscience of a king’, yes, but what else…?
If life
is a play and we but players in it, perhaps Shakespeare hits closer to home
when he has Macbeth cry: ‘…Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player/ that
struts and frets his hour upon the stage/ and then is heard no more; it is a
tale/ told by an idiot, full of sound and fury/ signifying nothing.’
William
Faulkner takes up the same theme in The
Sound and the Fury that has
to be one of the great novels of the 20th century.
As for
the rest of us, only a select few are likely to leave giant footprints, but when it comes to developing a sense of
direction and purpose in life, there’s nothing to stop us at least trying to be guided by them…is there? As for being male or female, gay, straight, bisexual or transgender, as I make the point so often in my gay-interest blog...our differences do not make us different, only human.
SHADES OF HAMLET or UNDERTOW
Time, time! A shifting, sifting play
on love and death - warring, scoring,
giving and partly giving;
urges better things, tugs at lesser
strengths, all finer struggle
caught in undertow
Now, sun in the water dazzles me
splendid heavens. Dove circling saintly
dives on a crumb;
willows weeping for each star fallen,
ebb tide grieves
me home
Home, home! A shifting, sifting play
on love and death - warring, scoring,
giving and partly giving;
urges us to better things, tugs at lesser
strengths, all finer struggle
caught in undertow
Copyright R. N. Taber 2000; 2012
[Note: A
slightly different version of this poem appears in Love and Human Remains by R. N. Taber, Assembly Books, 2000; revised ed. in e-format in preparation].
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