Cosmology
Cosmology Christopher Buckley Most days I find myself considering the encrypted clouds, though, while everything is blue through the boughs of heaven, I know the stars will hardly spell out our names in specks across the enormity(巨大,暴行) of night. We have these bodies from stars, second-hand, a diminishing(逐渐缩小的) quotient of dust lagging behind the soul, beggar with a cart -- told sticks, furniture piled on. . . . You're tired, your bones positioned on the couch each evening to ruminate, to remember where you left off taking notes, floating suppositions, a few unlikely alternatives, before they fall, like the last remaining cloud into the sea, before the stars scar your thoughts and the moon freezes the lemon blossoms, another vague(模糊的) brilliance abandoning you . . . . More dust glimmers before dawn where you can see the back of the sky shouldering empty space, confirming nothing -- the dulled earth just another rock, where we came from -- a few molecules rewired, bunched up now and heading off. . . . You've come this far with holes in your shoes, leaves in the pockets of your coat -- all you have finally to show for hunting the proposition of God in the burning clouds, in the invisible web of air, in the one petrified vowel of space. Your only hope now is to not bear false witness against the sea, the unknowable scattershot of stars. for Jon Veinberg |