THE LIMITS OF ART

Photo from Unsplash.

Photo from Unsplash.

Augustine’s dream

I see my soul’s image as I exhale the chill,
And a child digging in sand as the sea recedes.
He takes up his pail, scrambles toward heaven’s spill,
Fills it and returns making his bucket empty.

When I ask he says he is saving what he can.
Before the ocean pours through the far horizon. I
Ask “Are you trying to do what has no solution:
No ocean can fit in this little hole in the sand.”

The child stops and his hair swags, as in a picture
Soaring seagull swirl above him like A wreath tiara,
And says: “Impossible as your chore is to wed words
With human grief? If but Mount them for heart and souls release?”

My tongue was caught between awe and power, heard
What I, in belief, could but know like one knows speech.

M. James Burke

M. James Burke is a Boston native. From the age of ten, when a gift of rubber stamps of military items (tanks, soldiers etc) opened him up to the world of the written word (which he sold for a nickel a story to neighbors) , the poem has been his centering activity. He has been published in The New Renaissance, Antaeus, and America and has written op-eds and fiction. He feels most engaged in the (Catholic) duty of truth telling via beauty.

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SQUIRMY AND GRUBS AND THE WASHING OF FEET

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