Writing by Howard Nemerov

 
 The cursive crawl, the squared-off characters
 these by themselves delight, even without
 a meaning, in a foreign language, in 
 Chinese, for instance, or when skaters curve
 all day across the lake, scoring their white
 records on ice. Being intelligible, 
 these winding ways with their audacities
 and delicate hesitations, they become
 miraculous, so intimately, out there
 at the pen's point or brush's tip, do world
 and spirit wed. The small bones of the wrist
 balance against great skeletons of stars
 exactly; the blind bat surveys his way
 by echo alone. Still, the point of style
 is character. The universe induces
 a different tremor in every hand, from the 
 check-forger's to that of the Emperor
 Hui Tsung, who called his own calligraphy
 the 'Slender Gold.' A nervous man
 writes nervously of a nervous world, and so on.

 Miraculous.  It is as though the world
 were a great writing. Having said so much,
 let us allow there is more to the world
 than writing: continental faults are not
 bare convoluted fissures in the brain.
 Not only must the skaters soon go home;  
 also the hard inscription of their skates
 is scored across the open water, which long
 remembers nothing, neither wind nor wake. 
	
~ from The Collected Poems of Howard Nemerov (University of Chicago Press, 1981)
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