Remember Life and Death Are Indivisible — and That Means One

Remember Life and Death Are Indivisible

             — and That Means One

Modern poetry modern verse contemporary poetry contemporary verse modern poem contemporary poem 

First poems — and the last — let each one seize.

If it’s the first, make sure it cancels pasts

Since pasts refuse life’s serendipities.

As first its meaning fades forever, lasts.

If last, the lines defy your fate.  They wing

Their way beyond Valhalla and its gloom

Of slavery mead.  The last lines spill and sing

Like swans that coax their dying necks in doom.

The first and last, as one, the poem must

Push, masterful as deep tectonic plates

And heave the Rockies harsh above life’s crust

And death’s.  Lines have to master loves and hates.

  If first/last fails, what then?  You brand lines now

    In case forever fails to write its vow.

Phillip Whidden