The Moya View

Nightfall




The ramshackled town falls quiet
to the artist’s eye in the retreating light.
The old houses will truce their aged lumber,
antiquity, for the invading dark beauty of his creation.

He lived here once as a boy, in the sadness of his angels,
held hostage (he thought), by the catechism of church
and steeple, becoming a refugee from sawdust and faith,
believing being an exile will open his eyes to the truth.

He had returned from his long sojourn in the East
after seeing and experiencing the freedom of the world,
determined to posses this tract, once green space,the mountain beyond— to surrender it all, to the truth he knew.


The canvas submitted to his violence. The brushes
knew again, the small wars between mind and nature.
The hunger, the hunger, the hunger of eternal creation
that rises from the wanderlust in every artist and poet.

He did not listen to their prayers for mercy.
He wailed in his starvation “Come! Come!”
The shades of town, mountain, flower, deer, came.
And, as he must, he destroyed and devoured it all.


Posted

in

by

Comments

2 responses to “Nightfall”

  1. syreal Avatar
    syreal

    How do you see creativity as similar to destruction and craving?

  2. JONATHAN MOYA Avatar

    The poem follows the quantum theory that the simple observation of an atom changes by watching it. In psychology the same theory applies to how the eye creates a realistic theory of reality. It’s know as perception theory. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26384988/. It involves a type of destruction and reconstruction.

Leave a Reply

Gratification in time’s diminutions
My Penguin Friend: A Delightful Heartwarming Tale of Bird and Man Without the Avian Flu

Discover more from The Moya View

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading