I walk with you and on
You, Walt Whitman, just as you
Promised I would, I walk
On the blades
Of your century’s
Leaves of grass
And there I find you
Where you promised I would,
And so I stop with you
To listen again
As you sing
The body electric,
And I sing along, for I too am
As much Body as I am
Soul, whirring between
The worlds of being a human being,
Where all I am and all you are
Are just electrons moving
The way they move
In their shells of orbits
In the wide space around what
Nuclei we cannot know,
The centers turning to return
their prana back to prakriti,
back to the grams of matter times
the speed of light squared —
This is what I here release
Back to you,
My father,
My poet of the grass
And yet I seem to see you smile
From under the grass,
still unfinished, still uncontained,
And I seem to hear you saying:
No, my friend, not electrons only,
But touch and breath,
And an arm flung wide
Across another’s shoulder,
And the salt of the body,
And the long tide
Of men and women
Entering and leaving
Each other’s lives, impermanent
As waves returning to their shores
Without regret.
Clark, you say that the soul
Is not elsewhere, that
It is leaning here
In the wrist’s turn,
In the back’s bend,
In the unashamed gaze.
And I, much older now,
I feel the current slowing
In your century, but deeper now —
Not the flash
Of youth alone,
But the steady field
In which all things
Arrive to dissolve
Without sorrow and without loss.
So I stand here with you
Here on still-living leaves of grass,
And I do not pass on —
Not yet —
For the body still hums
And the grass still speaks,
And somewhere between
Your century and mine
The same charge is moving
Unowned,
Unbroken,
Unknown — and it is all
Enough, and it is
All there is — it is all
Enough…
Om shanti,
Shanti,
Shanti.

Clark Powell
Clark Powell is first a poet. An award-winning columnist, he has been published in Southern Living, Yoga International, and regional newspapers. He is the author of Sahaj Marg Companion. C... Read More
