I ask myself, how is it I have come,
Still so far from the sunset of my days,
(I pray tis not yet sunset on my days)
Unto some chamber in the maze of life
Where it is possible to hear you say
'I miss you' and 'I feel your absence in
The times when just to have you close nearby
Would bring me rest from grieving.' (Sunset knows
How much indeed I need rest from grieving)
Not lust, not appetite, not anything
That narrow press-lipped matrons warned against,
But only that you want me by your side.
I ask myself, how is it I have met,
Still nowhere near the sunset of my days,
(And if this be the sunset of my days,
I pray the sunset last for decades yet)
With that rare breed of love that poets would
Have you believe is something only glimpsed
But once in a millennium, if that.
The kind that is an ever fix'd mark
Yet does not mind when I am less than fixed,
Yet still is thrilled when I am fixed again.
That when I once had nowhere else to turn
(The sunset knows, not very long ago)
No one to care that I should live or die,
It, by so caring, unexpectedly,
Reminded me—this is what life feels like.
This is a home. And this a family.
And all these things are not exclusively
Reserved for other people. You as well
Shall pass through these before you pass the gates
Of utter west, and in the sunset rest.
(I pray that when I to that sunset pass
I find your path continues by my side.)
I ask myself, how much you asked yourself,
For I have not the heart to ask you plain,
(But, sunset knows, must hide it in a verse,)
How long, oh lord, how long did you endure?
You knew, I know, the windless desert air
Where sun is cruelty, and never sets,
And teaches but one lesson—Nobody
Ever will help you, ever will defend.
Did you despair as deeply as did I?
Was it as much impossibility
For you, when that intolerable sun
Proved one day to be setting, as for me?
(I prayed for sunset long before I knew
There was such thing as sunset.) If I traced
With disbelieving fingers all the scars
That cruelty and caution long since etched
Across your nerves, would I find them a match
For those that throb upon my hands and side?
I do not ask myself, if I deserve,
Who knows how near the sunset of my life
(And if this were the sunset, I would be
Content with such a sunset to my life)
To have you. It may be that I do not.
There's no 'deserve' to gentle rain, or sound
Of trees against the wind, or candlelight
In winter, or the distant salt sea smell.
What pedant hypocrite would think to ask
"Do you deserve the air?" I have the air.
I have the smell of sea. I have the flame
On winter nights. I have the sound of trees.
I have soft blessed rain. (And sunset knows
I have, all undeserving, the sunset.)
Whatever else you ask yourself, my love,
Ask not if you deserve me by your side.
I often ask myself, when others come
After has passed the sunset of our days
(Not even sunset knows who they shall be)
And we are gone, what archeology,
What mastery of lore, what history,
Could make them understand what you and I
Once built here, for eachother? What traces
Do such as you and I leave by the way—
No family name, no bloodline, no heirloom,
No genealogy, no monuments.
(I pray the sunset, one day to accept
Me of his bloodline, but that does not count.)
What kind of breadcrumb trail could lead the eyes
Of future ages, in the maze of life,
To find the chambers where I was with you?
A dog collar, too many worn-out shoes,
Some soda cans, some scraps of poetry.
If they can guess, from these, the kind of life
And home and family you were to me,
They're wiser far than any age before.
But then, I ask myself, what do I care?
I do not live for them.
I live for you.
When you shall say that just to have me near
Would bring you rest from grieving, let me be
At once and without question by your side
From now until the sunset of my days.
And aye, beyond. (May sunset will it so.)
It's sweet and thankful, but I also sense some bitter resignation, and maybe even a hint of outrage at this resignation? Like the thought of trudging on alone is scary and appalling just from having been a possible outcome in the first place. The narrator appears nearly suspicious of their own happiness, and probably don't feel like the master of their own fate.
There's also a definite little trace of humorous self-awareness that I thought was absolutely endearing, especially in the parentheses. I didn't detect much defiance at all against the harsh domain of the living, though. Very zen, but in a tragic way. Images about getting lost and found, and the passage of time, and passive contemplation of just how much the world didn't seem built for good endings.
Catastrophic luck. That's how I would summarize my impressions. This seemed to explore the emotion of getting catastrophically lucky, and barely believing it. That's how I personally received it.
Needless to say, I liked it a lot. <3
While certainly not all my poetry is autobiographical or personal, this one very much is. So you've managed to intuit a number of things about my own history, here. I certainly don't think I believe that there's such a thing as "being a master of one's fate," and Catastrophically Lucky, or "Eucatastrophe" to use the Tolkien term, is a pretty important concept to me.
I'm really glad you enjoyed it, and found all this it.
Of course, I wouldn't presume! This is why I was careful not to conflate narrator and author, though it is interesting to know that the poem was a particularly personal one. I wasn't really trying to guess as much as trying to figure out my own thoughts about it.
Sometimes I feel like the exact opposite way: that we are, in fact, trapped and condemned to be the masters of our own fates. Inevitably.
I honestly didn't know about "Eucatastrophe", and had to look it up. Kinda fascinating that this term already existed to express almost exactly what I was trying to express after reading your piece. Whoa. xD