Painting of Venice by Luigi Querena‘Passage in Venice’: A Poem by Royal Rhodes The Society November 29, 2020 Beauty, Culture, Poetry 4 Comments They mix together here waiting for the trim black and gold gondolas heading into side canals that drain and brim with refuse and will bear souls that wait to ride. The tourist’s straying finger stutters taking photos of shadows as they linger— chiaroscuro, light and dark—along the rows of tapered mooring poles that feel the water’s bite. The domed basilica, whose gold mosaic zoo of birds and fish that shimmer, scales in glassy hue, shelters Adam. Dimmer squares of silica depict what sin will do. He and Eve, still lost in deeper loss and weary, stare at us, and we look back and count the cost. With no way back. In teary smiles we hope to see the whole be whole again. Royal Rhodes is a retired professor of religion who has taught classes in global traditions, religion & the arts, and death & dying. A trained Classicist, his poetry often reflects those ancient themes and forms. He has had poems published online and in a series of poetry/art collaborations with The Catbird [on the Yadkin Press] in North Carolina. His current project is a poetry/photography collaboration on sacred sites in Italy. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. Trending now: 4 Responses Sally Cook November 29, 2020 Such a slow and beautiful poem, flowing along as do the canals, with many undercurrents of vocabulary and meaning. I hope to see more. Thank you Reply C.B. Anderson November 30, 2020 This poem, Royal, is a masterpiece of rather quiet manipulation of a reader’s sensibilities. And basilica/silica, though an identity rhyme, is masterful. You understand what you are doing here far better than I could ever explain. This poem reminds me, to some extent, of the original English poetry written by Richmond Lattimore. Classics is a good foundation from which to begin writing in the common modern tongue. Reply Margaret Coats November 30, 2020 An intriguing poem of individually well wrought stanzas that move the piece forward to become “the whole,” not quite seen as “we look back,” but promised to our “teary smiles.” As Sally says, the flow is fascinating. Reply Cynthia Erlandson December 1, 2020 I think this has an exquisitely musical flow. The rhyme scheme is intriguing; and I love the poignant ending. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Sally Cook November 29, 2020 Such a slow and beautiful poem, flowing along as do the canals, with many undercurrents of vocabulary and meaning. I hope to see more. Thank you Reply
C.B. Anderson November 30, 2020 This poem, Royal, is a masterpiece of rather quiet manipulation of a reader’s sensibilities. And basilica/silica, though an identity rhyme, is masterful. You understand what you are doing here far better than I could ever explain. This poem reminds me, to some extent, of the original English poetry written by Richmond Lattimore. Classics is a good foundation from which to begin writing in the common modern tongue. Reply
Margaret Coats November 30, 2020 An intriguing poem of individually well wrought stanzas that move the piece forward to become “the whole,” not quite seen as “we look back,” but promised to our “teary smiles.” As Sally says, the flow is fascinating. Reply
Cynthia Erlandson December 1, 2020 I think this has an exquisitely musical flow. The rhyme scheme is intriguing; and I love the poignant ending. Reply