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The silver net cover

The silver net

Chapter 19: THE IDOL
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About This Book

A sequence of lyrical meditations that shifts between dreamlike visions, confessional solitude, and mythic or biblical reverie. Recurring images of sea and shipwreck, roses and gardens, and masked or legendary figures are used to probe longing, shame, desire, and the hope for spiritual renewal. Poems alternate between dramatic monologue, fable-like sketches, and brief nocturnes, exploring the tensions between illusion and revelation, life and death, and love as both ensnaring and ennobling, producing a compact, contemplative cycle of symbolist-inflected verse.

THE IDOL

I am an idol made of bronze
And sit within a silver shrine,
Attended by a shaven bonze,
In a temple made of serpentine.
I sit thus through the burning day,
Through nights of gold-tipped indigo,
While at my feet the people pray
And lithesome virgins come and go.
But not for me their sidelong glance,
As reverently they wave their hands,
For watching their religious dance
A youthful, blue-eyed shepherd stands.
And I, the idol wrought in bronze,
To be that youth of low degree,
Would sacrifice my shaven bonze,
My temple, my eternity.