Images surround us ...

Michael Bailey michael.lee.bailey at gmail.com
Sat May 14 19:32:29 CDT 2011


alice wellintown wrote:
> This strikes, leaps off the page a poem, it rings all the bells in all
> the un real city


b-but what the heck does it mean?

I mean, we got the images surrounding us,

and then it transpires he means the images *of us* that others have
[or so we may reasonable presume] which are subjective and probably
not at all how we think of ourselves

and then our qualities good and bad changing and somehow in their
interactions they create recognitions

but how do we get from there to John the Baptist leaping in the womb

and then trying to intuit Jesus's feelings on the cross -

which, hey maybe this is the connection??? -  just as our own selves
are seen thru the filter of the other preoccupations of those who
notice us, so Jesus's experience and emotions are filtered [and then
written, nay painted] on the wind by Saint Paul the tentmaker who
presumably had a full set of his own distorting distractions and
preoccupations? and come to us 2nd hand, or really 3rd hand since we
are reading about it via WBG

so it goes, Otto's not alone in seeing thru a glass darkly


>
> Images surround us; cavorting broadcast in the minds of others, we
> wear the motley tailored by their bad digestions, the shame and
> failure, plague pandemics and private indecencies, unpaid bills, and
> animal ecstasies remembered in hospital beds, our worst deeds and best
> intentions will not stay still, scolding, mocking, or merely
> chattering they assail each other, shocked at recognition. Sometimes
> simplicity serves, though even the static image of Saint John Baptist
> received prenatal attentions (six months along, leaping for joy in his
> mother's womb when she met Mary who had conceived the day before):
> once delivered he stands steady in a camel's hair loincloth at a ford
> in the river, morose, ascetic on locusts and honey, molesting
> passers-by, upbraiding the flesh on those who wear it with pleasure.
> And the Nazarene whom he baptized? Three years pass, in a humility
> past understanding: and then death, disappointed? unsuspecting? and
> the body left on earth, left crying out - My God, why dost thou shame
> me? Hopelessly ascendant in resurrection, the image is pegged on the
> wind by an epileptic tentmaker, his strong hands stretch the canvas of
> faith into a gaudy caravanserai, shelter for travelers wearied of the
> burning sand, lured by forgetfulness striped crimson and gold,
> triple-tiered, visible from afar, redolent of the east, and level and
> wide the sun crashes the fist of reality into that desert where the
> truth still walks barefoot.
>



-- 
"...seems the simplest things are hardest to explain" - Dave Mason



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