There's no way to explain the order
Otherwise she had been first;Man was meant for Woman
Or else he'd be the worse.
She came after as equal
But also his--how should I say?
A partner, superior, and teacher
Who most cruelly shows the way.
He sees her first a Helen
Then a Fury--Lilith, or Salome,
And at long journey's end, a real Odysseus,
He meets Penelope.
She teaches him a humble way
And makes him close his mouth.
In the nuptial bower, however, there,
Reveals to him a truth:
You are not everything you seem
Nor are you what you lack--
Nor are you merely what you've done,
For truth will draw you back
In disguise, perhaps you'll learn
A thing or two 'bout youth
But from me, alone, you'll learn,
And naked then--
Something of God's reproof.
(image: Odysseus and Penelope, by Francesco Primaticcio, 1563)
7 comments:
Hey Greg--nobody reads your blog, you loser.
Greg: I know. That's what I intended. It's too good for mortals.
Well, I'm not mortal but I still don't like it.
Greg: What about the other gods? Could you recommend it?
Excellent, Greg! Reminds me of Milton's Adam & Eve. I think I commented more eloquently originally, but it didn't take so you'll have to take this second snippet. At any rate, I love your site and really admire your poetic gift. Looking forward to more,
Love,
Linda
Hi Linda--send me Milton's, so I can properly bask in the compliment (which I'm sure is quite outsized). Keep reading--I'm really working on some stuff for Christmas. Love you. gb
Did Linda send you this? Not sure if it's exactly what she's referencing:
http://www.poetry-archive.com/m/the_first_love_of_adam_and_eve.html
Thanks, whoever you are . . .
Greeeeeeg,
This is your cooooooonscience speaking!
Send Katy aaaaaall your moooooooney!
Not sure why your conscience would tell you to send me money, but still.
My comedy is always a little off...
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