I am reminded of a conversation I had many years ago when I was an egocentric teenager. I asked a teacher (as one does) what life is all about. Yes, well…silly
question, I know, but I thought it sounded clever. More to the point, I thought it made me appear very clever. I received what I thought was, in turn, a very silly answer,
something about its being a bedtime story for grown-ups.
Now, though, I’m not so sure it was such a silly answer, and suspect it was
too profound for my little poem to do it justice.
I recall telling my mother about that conversation. She just said, “He’s a very nice man if a little eccentric/ Mind you, there is always more to eccentric people than
meets the eye just as there's nearly always something in what they have to say worth giving some thought to. Now, go and do your
homework…’ Another very nice person, my mother . She, too, always had something to say worth giving some thought to.
CHARIOTS OF FIRE
Sometimes, I regret my lost youth
but for
its teaching me
my place in the world, neither high
nor low for racing chariots
of fire across a playground of dreams,
skimming time and space,
grandest of all arenas least known
to Man
It’s
enough, in the end, to land safe
and
sound among moon shadows
bringing we charioteers such presence
of mind-body-spirit known only
to children hungering for fairy tales,
now lost, now finding their way
in some otherworld to take up the reins
and race each other to cheers
and jeers, highs and lows, archived
to living memory
Can it be, I wonder, that life is, after all,
a (potentially) feel-good bedtime story?
Copyright
R. N. Taber 2009
Labels: aspirations. adulthood, childhood, competitiveness, contemporary, dreams, human nature, identity, life, mind-body-spirit, nature, philosophy, poetry, positive thinking, potential, society, wishful thinking