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Tinderbox pt.1—Magic At first, I caught its eye In the rolling smoke of fire I ****** my hands To pull it out And speak with lighted words, In light of brilliance, A vital warmth, But in the end just ashes. And then, The curve of silk waters Which rushed upon and through the rocks Wrote to me A rich and liquid poetry Not in bursts but subtle waves I cupped my hands to catch its words, But even then, I could only hold so much And only for so long.                Tinderbox pt. 2—the Artist Entranced in the world Here and beneath the moment, In the spaces and each letter I saw the fire, the waves of silk Each play in their environs, I’d grieve At their perfection, Running my eyes over their hilly peaks And dreaming mine had been there. My worlds were ugly, incomplete Extinguished at very moment That the two would meet The tinderbox was fire to my hands, My cup was rife with holes And there, I’d thought the artist dead Or never even alive. In my sleep I’d hear a voice Like Milton, Coleridge, or Shelley A babble arresting and forcing pity From its infantile lucidity... I knew this thing, but killed it. Perhaps even now, I believe in magic Though, to pluck rain from a furied storm Or converse with tiny sparks That become Something of brilliance and solemn silk That groves were wrought from tiny seeds Long after mere chaos That, from it, comes a universe and white paper is all it needs. What awoke me was not That there was art But that the words had tried to say something, Something the heart could not speak Nor the mind would dare to reason; It was not as much the words that made it up But the worlds in between them.
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Jan 14, 2014
Jan 14, 2014 at 8:24 AM UTC
Tinderbox--pts. 1 & 2
Tinderbox pt.1—Magic At first, I caught its eye In the rolling smoke of fire I ****** my hands To pull it out And speak with lighted words, In light of brilliance, A vital warmth, But in the end just ashes. And then, The curve of silk waters Which rushed upon and through the rocks Wrote to me A rich and liquid poetry Not in bursts but subtle waves I cupped my hands to catch its words, But even then, I could only hold so much And only for so long.                Tinderbox pt. 2—the Artist Entranced in the world Here and beneath the moment, In the spaces and each letter I saw the fire, the waves of silk Each play in their environs, I’d grieve At their perfection, Running my eyes over their hilly peaks And dreaming mine had been there. My worlds were ugly, incomplete Extinguished at very moment That the two would meet The tinderbox was fire to my hands, My cup was rife with holes And there, I’d thought the artist dead Or never even alive. In my sleep I’d hear a voice Like Milton, Coleridge, or Shelley A babble arresting and forcing pity From its infantile lucidity... I knew this thing, but killed it. Perhaps even now, I believe in magic Though, to pluck rain from a furied storm Or converse with tiny sparks That become Something of brilliance and solemn silk That groves were wrought from tiny seeds Long after mere chaos That, from it, comes a universe and white paper is all it needs. What awoke me was not That there was art But that the words had tried to say something, Something the heart could not speak Nor the mind would dare to reason; It was not as much the words that made it up But the worlds in between them.
Art is not the presentation, but the meaning that hides beneath it--what it says both with words and without--in both author and audience. Art is not magic, it's a voice, an articulation of one's inner world which springs from a single inspiration. Perhaps, one should not begin trying to craft worlds right away or bring the world to word; it's hard enough solidifying one'd own, inner tumult of thought and scene. Don't be discouraged if your art is not pretty; you've created something, a world, a universe, and that's worth more, more aesthetic than any pretty string of words. Art is art, it's subjective, and creators are worth more to us than anything else.
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Jan 14, 2014
Jan 14, 2014 at 8:24 AM UTC
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