I Think Constantly of Those Who Were Truly Greatby Michael Blumenthal
and, to be perfectly honest, it bums me out.
So many great ones! —libidinal heroes, idealists, warrior-chieftains, revolutionaries, fabulists of all sorts, even the great Irish pig farmers and Armenian raisin growers —and who, I ask myself, am I by comparison? Calmed by Valium, urged on by Viagra, uplifted by Prozac, I go about my daily rounds, a quotidian member of the quotidian hierarchy, a Perseus with neither a war nor a best friend, and sink to the depths of despair on the broken wings of my own mundanity. If only some god had given me greatness, I surely would have made something of it— perhaps a loftier, more humble poem than this, or some übermenschliche gesture that would reveal my superiority to the ordinary beings and things of this world. But here I am now, one of the earth's mere Sancho Panzas, leading those heroic others through the world on their magnificent horses, merely turning the page, dreaming my own small deeds into their magnificent arms.
"I Think Constantly of Those Who Were Truly Great" by Michael Blumenthal, from No Hurry: Poems 2000-2012. © Etruscan Press, 2012. Reprinted with permission.
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A PERSONAL JOURNAL, KEPT LARGELY TO RECORD REFERENCES TO WRITINGS, MUSIC, POLITICS, ECONOMICS, WORLD HAPPENINGS, PLAYS, FILMS, PAINTINGS, OBJECTS, BUILDINGS, SPORTING EVENTS, FOODS, WINES, PLACES AND/OR PEOPLE.
About Me
- Xerxes
- New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
- Admire John McPhee, Bill Bryson, David Remnick, Thomas Merton, Richard Rohr and James Martin (and most open and curious minds)
21.10.14
Greatness
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