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Matter
Equals Energy
By Doug Talley
Years
ago, when I first began writing poetry, a friend shared
with me something he had read in Confucius. The ancient
sage had just two rules of advice for the poet: (1) Say
what needs to be said, and (2) Stop. Perhaps the greatest
challenge in writing any poem is to have something worthwhile
to say. All other elements – metaphor, allusion, form,
meter, rhyme, if any – become secondary to this crucial
primary element. The 20th century American
poet Ezra Pound declared that the poet who really had
something to say would eventually find a way to say it.
There is no substitute in poetry for worthy subject matter.
As in physics, so it is in poetry. Matter equals energy.
Dante
believed the three great subjects of poetry were war,
love and virtue. More modest topics may qualify also,
if the poet offers some worthwhile and engaging insight
previously not considered. The first time I read The
Consolation of Philosophy, by the sixth century Roman
statesman Boethius, I was amazed
by the abundance of his ideas – one delightful insight
followed another like an unbroken string. He wrote the
volume, a mixture of prose and poetry, while unjustly
imprisoned for treason before being condemned to death
in 524 A.D. Consider the following two ideas, the first
in poetry and the second a syllogism in prose:
O
felix hominum
genus
Si vestros animos
amor
Quo
caelum regitur regat. |
O happy race of men,
If
the love that rules the stars
Rules as well your hearts! |
Nam
quoniam beatitudinis
adeptione fiunt
homines beati, beatitudo vero est ipsa divinitas,
divinitatis adeptione
beatos fieri manifestum
est: sed uti iustitiae
adeptione iusti,
sapientiae sapientes fiunt, ita divinitatem
adeptos deos
fieri simili ratione
necesse est. Omnis igitur
beatus deus. . . . .
“Since
men become happy by the acquisition of happiness, and
happiness itself is divinity, it also follows that men
become happy by the acquisition of divinity: but just
as the acquisition of justice makes men just, and the
acquisition of wisdom makes them wise, so also by similar
reasoning the acquisition of divinity makes them gods.
Therefore, every happy man becomes a god . . . .”
I
love both these insights and have benefited greatly by
them. I appreciate the idea that the divine affection
that shapes the stars might also shape my heart. I further
appreciate the implicit understanding of the doctrinal
principle of exaltation, that the acquisition of true
happiness brings with it divinity. Toward the end of his
life Boethius clearly had something
to say, and found a way to say it, even while organizing
his matter in a rather unconventional mixture of poetry
and prose.
A
while ago I received a poetry submission that attracted
me because it offered an intriguing idea, and seemed to
illustrate so simply the paramount principle of having
something unique and important to say. I offer it here
for consideration:
Accumulations
by
Mark Sheffield Brown
I
buy a paper,
read in the car,
read that energy has mass,
that sunlight is energy,
and that four and half
pounds of light
fall on the earth
every day.
Since I've known you,
eighty tons have dropped,
warm, weak,
slid down through
high sheets of air
to our shoulders.
Is that forty tons
for each of us?
Twenty for each shoulder?
I arrive
and we walk
along brown edges
of mountains,
talking,
unaware of our
accumulations.
Note
how the poem, at first blush, seems devoid of any poetic
ornament. There is nothing flowery in it, and accordingly,
nothing deters from the central, fascinating proposition.
When Einstein demonstrated in his famous equation that
energy has mass, it was astonishing. Yet it seems equally
astonishing to apply that equation to our common, every
day lives. The insight that physical light accumulates
over time serves as a symbol of infinite suggestiveness.
That is, if something as light and frothy as sunshine
accumulates imperceptibly with the passage of time to
such great weight, what else might also be accumulating
without our precise understanding? Love? Happiness? Knowledge?
Eternal life? Unaware as they are, the couple of this
poem suggests the accumulations could be anything and
everything.
With
each reading of the poem its mystery grows richer. Find
a calculator, do the math yourself, and another dimension
opens. The passage of time indicated by the poem proves
more complicated than its first reading might suggest.
Or on a third or fourth reading consider precisely the
words chosen to deliver the poem’s proposition. Just what,
exactly, is the arrival that occurs at the end of the
poem? Arrival from where and to where? Is it the end of
a mere drive in the country, or of a journey, or of a
lifetime? Or ask why the sunlight falls upon, and is divided
by, the “shoulders”, and not some other body part? Does
the selection of this particular word suggest that the
collective burdens, which we bear over great lengths of
time, perhaps even twenty tons to a shoulder, are in hindsight
really not so difficult and challenging after all? Without
being the least bit didactic, the poem seems quite hopeful
and comforting. After the tenth reading or so, I realized
the poem was a kind of accumulation itself, reinforcing
its own central proposition. With each reading, the poem
itself “shoulders” additional possibilities and acquires
new meaning, suggesting its own infinite accumulation
of light.
Receiving
periodically a poem like this one makes the work of an
editor fully worthwhile. I extend my appreciation to the
author for submitting it, and for reinforcing the notion
that no element in poetry can compensate for the lack
of a good idea. Matter does, indeed, equal energy.
Following
the advice of Confucius and having said what needs to
be said, I can now stop, except to add a biographical
note. Mark Sheffield Brown earned his MFA in Creative
Writing from Boise State University and teaches English at the College of Southern Idaho in Twin Falls. He is married to the former
Suzanne Day and together they have two daughters.
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© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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About
the Editor:
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Doug Talley
graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from
Bowling Green State University in 1976. Upon graduation he spent
the summer in the Grand Tetons looking for God, which led him on
a hitch-hiking spree to Salt Lake City. He joined the Church and
thereafter served in the Italy, Rome Mission from 1978 to 1980.
After his mission he enrolled in the University of Akron School
of Law. He graduated in 1984 and has "fiddled at the law"
ever since, currently as the CEO of Millennial Assurance Services,
Inc. He has published one book of poetry, The Angel Voice of
Irony, a sonnet sequence about his conversion. A second book
of poetry, April in October, is planned for publication in
2003. His poems have appeared in The American Scholar, Midwest
Poetry Review, Piedmont Literary Review, Hellas,
and other journals. He and his wife and seven children live in Akron,
Ohio, where he has served in every ward calling from scoutmaster
to bishop.
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| Guidelines
for Submitting Poetry to Meridian Magazine |
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Guidelines:
- Send submissions
by email to poetryeditor@meridianmagazine.com
- Submit
one to five poems at a time.
- Include
the text of the poems in the email message itself (preferred)
or as a Word attachment.
- Include
your first and last name in the subject line.
- Include
a brief biographical statement and where you are from.
- Authors
whose work is selected for publication will be notified by email.
New poems will be featured anywhere from two to four weeks,
and will thereafter be available in the poetry page's archive.
Authors retain all rights to their work.
We
look forward to your submissions!
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