POEM

Maximus, to himself

by Charles Olson

I have had to learn the simplest things
last. Which made for difficulties.
Even at sea I was slow, to get the hand out, or to cross
a wet deck.
               The sea was not, finally, my trade.
But even my trade, at it, I stood estranged
from that which was most familiar. Was delayed,
and not content with the man’s argument
that such postponement
is now the nature of
obedience,
               that we are all late
               in a slow time,
               that we grow up many
               And the single
               is not easily
               known

It could be, though the sharpness (the achiote)
I note in others,
makes more sense
than my own distances. The agilities

               they show daily
               who do the world’s
               businesses
               And who do nature’s
               as I have no sense
               I have done either

I have made dialogues,
have discussed ancient texts,
have thrown what light I could, offered
what pleasures
doceat allows

               But the known?
This, I have had to be given,
a life, love, and from one man
the world.
               Tokens.
               But sitting here
               I look out as a wind
               and water man, testing
               And missing
               some proof

I know the quarters
of the weather, where it comes from,
where it goes. But the stem of me,
this I took from their welcome,
or their rejection, of me

               And my arrogance
               was neither diminished
               nor increased,
               by the communication


2

It is undone business
I speak of, this morning,
with the sea
stretching out
from my feet

Charles Olson was an innovative, award-winning poet and essayist whose work influenced . . . MORE »

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