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Wounded Bud - Poems for Meditation by Alfred K. LaMotte The poet
Shelley wrote: "Every original language near to its source is the
chaos of a cyclic poem... A poet participates in the eternal, the
infinite, and the one." Ancient cultures recognized that the
mystery of creation is the mystery of "original language." So
John's Gospel declares, "In the beginning was the Word." And
India's Mandukya Upanishad says, "All that ever was, is, or will be
is created through the syllable Om." The poems in this volume
reflect this ancient science of mantra. "Man" is the Sanskrit root
of the English "mind" and "tra" of our suffix "tron," meaning
vehicle. A mantra is a vehicle to carry the mind back to the source
of creation, divine silence. Here in the heart, love awakens. Fred
LaMotte conceives language in this ancient tradition, where poetry
is a means of taking us home, taking us Om. Many of these poems
also reflect the tradition of the mystical marriage. Poets of
Eastern and Western religions understood the intimate play of soul
and spirit as the whisperings of Lover and Beloved. They created a
common poetic iconography, a love-language both sensuous and
mystical, which we find in Sufi poets like Hafiz, Hindu poets like
Mirabai, the Biblical Song of Songs, the Medieval troubadours, and
the parables of Jesus. Mystical poetry can dis- solve religious
conflict. Fred LaMotte offers us a revival of atavistic poetics:
poetry as meditation, poetry as devotion, or Bhakti, poetry as
love-song in the Bridal Chamber of the heart. "In the lover's heart
is a lute which plays the melody of longing." Rumi
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