October 14, 2021

Ed Orr

CAMUS AT ORAN

He traveled widely to discover what
had long since troubled and informed his heart.
The stone lions before the town hall at Oran
were thought to leave their pedestals at night
and walk the square—as silent as the flight
of the soul from the body at death—stopping, on occasion,
beneath the tall dusty fig trees, to relieve
themselves, inanimate fountains that believe
anything is possible, a stone’s throw, volition.
The radiance of the world does not come easily.
It piles up like stone and falls just as readily.
In Oran, the pebble is worshipped without reservation.
All who have lost know love wears thin as passion.
Conviction, the soul is ruled by something thin.

from Rattle #18, Winter 2002

__________

Ed Orr: “In my own mind, I would be invisible to myself—to say nothing of others—if I didn’t write. Thoughts come, connect, and I must record, with conscience, or suffer.”

Rattle Logo

November 23, 2011

Ed Orr

THE SPECIFICITY OF GENERALITIES

The “Year Without a Summer” was technically not
a year without summer—just colder than most:
frozen lakes, failed crops, feelings that, foremost,
accompany winter—wondering, for example,
if spring, let alone summer, will ever come.
The tiger, in its relentless measured momentum,
releases itself from its cage; but no one notices
its stripes have changed to spots in their calloused
mechanical eyes. The beggar sees his chance—
it is not so hard for him to see through earth,
which reduces history to darkened colors.
And history repeats itself in darkened colors.
“Why then,” the little girl asks, “should anyone
embrace the means? Is every year a year
without summer? Is that why birds fly south,
because somewhere it must be summer?” Her mother
smiles her maternal smile. She knows it is
possible to be both right and wrong. What does one tell
a mother she should tell her daughter? The wind,
brute strength, and flower, spiritual bravado, will
be at odds—though, when the time was right, they have been known
to schmooze. Siena was like that. Not everyone belonged there.
And sometimes it takes an apocalypse of nature to remind
us not everything is meant for everyone. Seasons
are just. Think back. The moon. How believable is that?

from Rattle #25, Summer 2006

Rattle Logo