The Hero

Mortal and full of praise,
I watch the enchanted hero busy at his chores:
desert, tundra,
prairie restless
under an easy stride.
 
Dagger in belt, sword
slapping thigh, he passes
from sight, the restored land
sprung airily
to green praise.
 
    Arachnid webs entangle life.
    A busyness of thread
    weaves silk into night—
    the long shudder of moonlight,
    a transfixed eye shuddering.
 
    Nothing is so easy as death, I try to say.
 
    But the hard fact of glazed eyes, the boy turned to
        solitude, lies
    face up in the center of all webs, roads
    unwinding stubble.
                                     Whoever is alone
    walks brittle filaments, late
    stars smudged on dawn, a night sky’s frayed
    dawn.
              Dare we evaluate life:
    This hero’s gesture charms eternity?
 
Someone who paused here once on an ordinary day,
troubled by the impatience of his calling,
set up a hasty signpost:
“Toward…”
 
    Nothing is so scarred
    as this place, shards of parched
    cloth trampled by footprints coiling
    crazed centers.
                             Fresh with spring, light breezes play
    on dust.
                      A whisper of rain. Ropes of skeined thunder
       twist sky.
 
 

Source: Poetry (October 1971)