|
Song of the April Fool Lover of the devious The hoax And celebrator of the artful deception I rarely pass an April's first Without some fool's taking-in. Today, there being no lack of this daily feed Abundantly spread for friends and fools alike I choose to make no new fraud To add to that abundant store But prefer instead to be this April Behind those holy and profane Pilgrims Who brave the early spring storms On the road to Canterbury. Reading those song like rhymes That sprung so joyfully from Chaucer's heart I find myself again at one With all seekers of Delight Love Healing Forgiveness Redemption Ecstasy Fornication And Adventure On that road to Canterbury. We who in our time have lost Not only the connection to The hurtling of our planet 'round The brilliant fire That so rules worms and kings But also any traffic with the preternatural That is why this year I pilgrimage back to the source Seeking it in Canterbury As our ancestors And even our simian uncles knew When future paths are blocked By torrent and avalanche It requires us to find older courses That lead to green pastures And maps that guide to ways That reaffirm the roots From which creation springs And the clear sure voices of the gods.[1.] Reluctantly we turn from The superhighway and follow the Barely legible sign that points To Canterbury. This magical pile of stones Rests in gothic repose In the center of a town of Less than 50,000 souls. Still the hub of modern pilgrims Who drawn like floating Grains of iron to the magnet's core File half in wonder Half in idle curiosity Beneath the cathedral arches In Canterbury. There they marvel at the meddlesome priest's Foully martyred blood[2.] And meditate on Augustine's [3.] First footfalls seeking The pagan foundation tracings Among the buttercups and the marigold Surrounding the city of the new god Of Canterbury This pilgrimage is no retreat But a gathering in Of all that has been lost In the mad rush for the Distraction and constipation of Power Conquest And Greed That now would make the earth a dung heap. We pass beneath this Architecture of praying stones Not as a shuddering refuge But as a doorway A leading prospect that lies before us A dedication to our lineage from Lucy of Africa To Lucy in the sky [4.] We repose our pilgrimage beneath these stones Not as a sanctuary so much as A querencia [5.] from which to launch a Future for our exalted little band of apes Our holy duties done We retrace our pious tracks Back to a world transformed By our pilgrimage to Canterbury. Footnotes: [1.] According to Julian Jaynes, "The Origin of Consciousness and the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind". consciousness, as we know it today, is a relatively new faculty, one that did not exist until as recently as 2000 B.C. To ancient man, God was not a mental image or a deified thought but an actual voice heard when one was presented with a situation requiring decisive action. http://www.science-frontiers.com/sf043/sf043p18.htm[2.] St. Thomas Becket (c 1118 – December 29, 1170) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 to 1170. He is venerated as a saint and martyr by both the Roman Catholic Church and the Anglican Church. He engaged in a conflict with King Henry II over the rights and privileges of the Church and was assassinated by followers of the king in Canterbury Cathedral. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Becket Henry's exclamation "Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest?" is said to be one of the earliest examples of plausible deniability and was interpreted by the assassins as an irrefutable, if indirect, royal command. [3.] Augustine (not to be confused with the more famous Saint Augustine of Hippo - 354 – 430 CE) was the first Archbishop of Canterbury. he was sent to Ethelbert of Kent one of the Merovingian kings by Pope Gregory the Great in 597. Ethelbert himself was a pagan, but allowed his wife to worship God her own way. Probably under influence of his wife, Bertha, Ethelbert asked the Pope to send missionaries. The church of Canterbury was built on a site sacred since Roman times. [4.] Lucy - Australopithecus Afarensis Female 3.9 to 3 million years ago discovered in Ethiopia on November 30, 1974, near the Awash River by anthropologist Donald Johanson and one of his students, Tom Gray. Both were on the hot arid plains surveying the dusty terrain when a fossil caught Gray's eye; an arm bone fragment on a slope in a gulley. Near it lay a fragment from the back of a small skull. As they looked further, more and more bones were found, including jaw, arm bone, thighbone, ribs, and vertebrae. They carefully analyzed the partial skeleton and calculated that an amazing 40% of a hominin skeleton was recovered, which, while sounding generally unimpressive, is astounding in the world of anthropology. Usually, only fossil fragments are discovered; rarely are skulls or ribs found intact. The skeleton AL 288-1 was nicknamed Lucy, after the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", which was played repeatedly on a tape recorder at the camp as they celebrated all night after finding the first bones. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_%28Australopithecus%29 [5.] "In Spanish, la querencia refers to a place on the ground where one feels secure, a place from which one's strength of character is drawn. It comes from the verb "querer", to desire, but this verb also carries the sense of accepting a challenge, as in a game. In Spain, querencia is most often used to describe the spot in a bullring where a wounded bull goes to gather himself, the place he returns to after his painful encounters with the picadors and the banderilleros. It is unfortunate that the word is compromised in this way; for the idea itself is quite beautiful – a place in which we know exactly who we are. The place from which we speak our deepest beliefs. Querencia conveys more than "hearth". And it carries this sense of being challenged – in the case of a bullfight, by something lethal, which one may want no part of. I would like to take this word querencia beyond its ordinary meaning and suggest that it applies to our challenge in the modern world, that our search for a querencia is both a response to threat and a desire to find out who we are. And the discovery of a querencia, I believe, hinges on the perfection of a sense of place." Barry Lopez, The Rediscovery of North America, p39-40
Robert Boldt an editor of MWC News, is a freelance film/video producer living in Jefferson City, Missouri. He is active in local politics, worked on the Howard Dean and John Kerry campaigns and is a cofounder of The White Rose Collective. Articles by Bob Boldt at MWC News http://mwcnews.net/bob-boldt |
|
This_Category |
|
Category:: MWC Corner |
Recommend this article...
Quote this article on your site | Views: 598
Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.4 Tags: Bob Boldt April Fool
|