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Willow's forge, and other poems

Chapter 9: The Counsel of Gilgamesh
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About This Book

A varied set of poems mixes ballads, lyrical meditations, cant songs, and devotional sequences to evoke both rural and urban landscapes while probing longing, loss, faith, and the uncanny. Some pieces adopt narrative ballad forms to tell haunted or elegiac stories; others offer intimate prayers, mystical reflections, or ironic streetwise verses that capture modern motion and twilight. The collection balances storytelling energy with devotional and folkloric imagery, moving between direct emotion and contemplative spiritual seeking across concise and narrative-driven lyric modes.

The Counsel of Gilgamesh

‘Gilgamesh, why dost thou wander around?
Life, which thou seekest, thou canst not find.’
Epic of Gilgamesh.
Why wander round, Gilgamesh?
The sun that set to-night
Shall climb the sky to-morrow,
And bake the world with light.
Throughout undying ages
The sun shall set and rise
As it hath set and risen
From dim eternities.
Why wander round, Gilgamesh?
Why vainly wander round?
What canst thou find, O seeker,
Which hath not long been found?
What canst thou know, O scholar,
Which hath not long been known?
What canst thou have, O spoiler,
Which dead men did not own?
The camel of the desert,
The wild ape of the wood,
Tread the white bones of heroes
Who in thy place once stood;
Like thee, they felt the sunshine,
Like thee, they loved the day,
Like thee, they sought and suffered—
And thou shalt be as they.
And other men, Gilgamesh,
Shall seek what thou dost seek,
And to their youth and ardour
Thy rotting bones will speak.
They will not heed thy counsel,
They too will wander round,
And waste their years in seeking
That which hath long been found.
Why wander round, Gilgamesh?
Why vainly wander round?
What canst thou find, O seeker,
Which hath not long been found?
What canst thou know, O scholar,
Which dead men did not know?
And this was asked in Nineveh
Thousands of years ago.