"Autobiographies of great nations are written in three manuscripts – a book of deeds, a book of words, and a book of art. Of the three, I would choose the latter as truest testimony." - Sir Kenneth Smith, Great Civilisations

"I must write each day without fail, not so much for the success of the work, as in order not to get out of my routine." - Leo Tolstoy

I have never believed that one should wait until one is inspired because I think the pleasures of not writing are so great that if you ever start indulging them you will never write again. - John Updike

"The life of every man is a diary in which he means to write one story, and writes another; and his humblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with what he vowed to make it." - J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

Poetry is the shadow cast by our streetlight imaginations." - Lawrence Ferlinghetti


[Note - If any article requires updating or correction please notate this in the comment section. Thank you. - res]


Monday, February 9, 2026

Romantic Irish Poetry



Irish love speaks to loyalty - not possession.
Irish beauty is that of memory - not escape.
Sorrow refers to Ireland's shared inheritance -
    and not private failure.
Her songs dreamt of cultural survival -
    without promise of healing unshut its wounds.
In all, Ireland's promise was to herself -
    built in faithfulness, enchantment, love, and land.

- R.E. Slater

What Songs Were For

Ireland did not sing because the world was gentle.
It sang because it wasn’t,
And she was defiant.

She early learned silence can be a form of death,
    and acts of grievance yet another form.
So she found the narrow road between -
    one that bends,
    one that remembers.

Her poems were never meant to save.
They were meant to keep her human.

When Irish lands were stolen,
    Erin Fair rose from Irish mouths.
When her language thinned,
    she hid it in her melodies.
When her heart broke,
    shee did not call it defeat,
    she called it a new knowing.

Love was never conquest.
It meant staying.
Staying when leaving would have been easier.
Staying when hope came back empty-handed.
Staying long enough for grief
    to learn how to speak without shouting.

You’ll hear it if you listen properly -
    not in the loud lines,
    but in the soft undertones.
The pause before blessing.
The joke told at wakes.
The song that carries sorrow
    without dropping one's grief.

Her poets did not write to escape the world.
They wrote to endure it without becoming cruel.

And if Irish poems sound tender,
    don’t mistake them for weakness.
A people do not learn tenderness
    by living softly,
    but by being scourged,
    and by being harmed.

So if you ask what the old songs were doing,
    what the love poems were really for,
    this is the answer:

They were saying quietly, stubbornly,
    we are still here.
And more than that:
    we still felt,
    we still bled,
    we still died.

And that, in a hard Irish century,
was resistance enough. ☘️


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved





By the Liffey at Dusk
(a major river in eastern Ireland)

The river learned my silent secret,
carrying the vow I never lived,
keeping it unspoken, hidden,
deep within my broken spirit.

At dusk, when the city softened,
and its hidden thieves revive.
There, I watched your shadow,
cross the old bridge forgiven.

If love must fail, let it fail gently,
like rain upon the quays,
leaving but the lingering scent,
of wet rain and damp earth.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




Old Love Song for a New Century

I loved you not by trumpet nor vow,
but the way dear 'Erin loves her hills -
knowing her soils will break the heart
when sowing its rocky green fields.

A bounteous harvest ne'er was promised,
though weather and time required;
we could but toil in love's untold pain,
praying our efforts reaped enough.

When grief  comes, let it be human.
And if true love, let it last -
longer than certainty
deeper than hope.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




The Country We Carry Within

There are countries you can leave
and countries that walk inside you.
Ireland is the unsettling latter -
with mud on her tongue,
and prayer in her bones.

We gladly inherit her grammars,
her griefs half-sung, half-sworn.
She taught us how to bless the wound,
without naming it holy or right.

And when the night turns cruel,
it is her voice we answer within -
low, cracked, always faithful,
faithful to the bitter end....


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




A Love Poem Written in Rain

The rain knew you before I did.
It touched your face like memory,
falling as if it had been waiting
centuries to find you.

We spoke a little,
Ireland wanted it so.
But every echoing silence
held words that only bruised.

When you left, the sky did not protest.
It simply kept raining -
as if to say:
love had never belonged here.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




A Toast for the Heart Broken

May your sorrows never harden you,
nor seldom joys make you cruel.
May love come late if it must,
but may it come ever true.

May you learn the Irish practice -
that beauty more often limps,
that faith survives in fragments,
and laughter find its own courage.

And should you lose what you loved,
may you lose it singing in the rain.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved




Between the Roads

The darkling road is narrow,
the kind that doesn’t argue
with stony weather or doubt.
It absorbs its wanderers
and moves along its paths.

A young lass walks its bends,
not because she is certain,
but because stopping
would mean turning around.
The valise pulls hard on her arm
like a question she hasn’t answered.

Behind her, a pause -
a man-shaped hesitation
is left standing in the middle.
Some choices linger like that,
not chasing...
but not letting go.

Ireland does this to people.
It puts space between them
asking what still belongs.
Her rocky walls listen.
Her fields keep their counsel.
Her coastal airs smell like fresh rain
remembering its birthing mother.

Nothing is decided here -
only momentarily revealed.
The road holds both directions,
and love, if it’s real,
will walk its own way too.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



The Road That Wouldn’t Decide

The road ran thin between its fields,
no promises lay in its bends,
but hedgerows leaning closely together
listening to hearts pretend.

The sky hung soft with borrowed light,
the day unsure its stays,
with every step she took ahead
left something further away.

She walked with unsure confidence,
wrapped a coat, a hat, her doubts,
her love folded inward like a letter
she had not unfolded back out.

Ireland knew what she did not -
that leaving leaves a wound,
and love might only choose
when to become earthbound.

Behind stood the man she loved
as still as hewn granite stone,
not chasing what was leaving him,
but not brave enough alone.

Ireland held them in its way -
not sorrowed nor disgraced,
but room enough for longing
that growing distance has to face.

No vow was broken on the road,
neither promises fully forsworn.
Some loves cannot be kept,
but neither can they be over-worn.

Love lives like heat in ancient rock
held within the sun's daily passage,
still warmly radiating lively presence,
long after fair orb has disappeared.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



Stone-Warm Words

Irish words come slowly,
as its green hills do -
there is no hurry in them,
no need to wake and shine.

They are tender and sturdy,
like stone warmed by sun,
holding the day’s last heat
long after its light has gone.

You can lean your back against them
when the wind turns sharp.
They will not move.
They will not preach.

They remember one's hands -
    those that lifted,
    those that buried,
    those that stayed empty
and still learned to bless.

Such words do not promise rescue.
They offer company.
They sit beside you
until grief learns its own shape.

And when spoken aloud,
they sound like this:
    not hope shouted,
    but endurance sung low -
a warmth kept quietly
for whoever comes next.


R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved





FIVE VERSES ON DUBLINTOWN

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT
February 8, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved


1) A ballad in a street-wise Dublin voice
(imagined as hard, lyrical, human)

Still the Liffey keeps its counsel,
carrying every wayward sin downstream,
that the mouths that curse the night
might learn to bless each morning with song.
For in Dublin faire, the broken laugh,
refusing to die and dying to live.


2) A verse in Irish romantic-tragic tone
(imagined in the voices of Moore and Mangan)

Grief walks softly in Dublin town,
heard its doorways and late prayers,
in the hands passing bread when words have failed.
Her beloved city remembers what was  done,
and still dares to forgive by morning.


3) A verse with a satirical Irish bite
(imagined with a Swiftian edge)

Ireland town sells it Guinness by the pint
with an Irish grin and a blessing.
Its truth is traded cheap at the bar
but its loyalty is held most dearly.
Each conscience will come to pay a price
without ever admitting its payment.


4) An elegiac civic lament
(imagined as an urban pastoral with Irish cadence)

In Dublin's rain-soaked streets
are heard the old songs,
perhaps centuries old.
Of mercy learned late,
and forgiveness bruised.


5) An Irish proverb
(imagined as an Irish toast)

Dublin is a city of chances and cheats
and back-stabbing snakes,
where the worst of humanity
collects the poison of their country
and still calls it home.


Note: The first 4-lines are from a quip
recited in the movie "Leap Year"




SAMPLE IRISH BLESSINGS

An Irish Blessing

May the road rise to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
the rains fall soft upon your fields,
and until we meet again,
may God hold you
in the hollow of his hand.


An Irish Wedding Toast
(traditional)

May you live as long as you want,
and never want as long as you live.


A fuller Irish Wedding Blessing
(often paired with the toast)

May God be with you and bless you,
may you see your children’s children,
may you be poor in misfortune and rich in blessings,
may you know nothing but happiness
from this day forward





IRISH ROMANTIC POETRY

Irish Romantic poetry (roughly 1790s–1840s) often carries a double charge: the classic Romantic repertoire (nature, longing, memory, the sublime, the solitary voice) braided with Ireland’s specific historical pressures (Union, censorship, dispossession, exile, famine, cultural recovery). The results are lyrics that can look like “love songs” on the surface while operating as coded political speech underneath - a hallmark of the period’s Irish inflection.

What makes Irish, “Irish” (and not just Romantic)

  • Song, as national memory: poems designed to be sung, or written in the atmosphere of traditional airs, where melody becomes a carrier of belonging. Thomas Moore is the emblem here.

  • Allegory under pressure: Examples: “Beloved woman” as Ireland, “love's lament” as nationalist vow - are strategies that let poets gesture politically when direct nationalism could be dangerous. (Mangan’s “Dark Rosaleen” is the classic case.)

  • Translation, imitation, “masking” voices: Irish poets frequently write through persona, pseudo-translation, or re-voicing older materials - a Romantic fascination with fragment, ruin, and recovered song, intensified by colonial language politics.


The many tracts from Irish poets who fought for Irish Independence




IRISH ROMANTIC POETRY
Remaining Human Under Pressure

Wikipedia - Irish poetry

Wikipedia - Irish history

Wikipedia - Irish Independence

Irish Romantic poetry is often mistaken for escape into beauty. In truth, it is something harder and more disciplined: a way of remaining human under pressure. Where much English Romanticism retreats into private vision or solitary nature, Irish Romantic feeling functions as an ethical stance. To feel deeply in a world shaped by dispossession, censorship, exile, hunger, and ridicule was already a form of resistance. These poets were not writing because the world was kind, but because refusing tenderness would have meant surrender.

This is why song mattered so much. Irish Romantic poetry is inseparable from music, memory, and oral survival. Cadence and melody carried what print could not always protect. Love poems bore nations. Blessings carried grief without naming it. Beauty became a way of remembering without hardening.

This pattern is set early by Thomas Moore, whose Irish Melodies fuse lyric beauty with national loss. In poems such as “The Harp That Once Through Tara’s Halls,” music becomes history you can carry. Moore’s power is soft rather than strident - no rage, no slogans, only elegy. Romantic love and cultural memory are indistinguishable, and the harp stands as Ireland herself: broken, silenced, yet still sacred.

That fusion intensifies in James Clarence Mangan, whose work inhabits dream, hunger, disguise, and rebellion. In “Dark Rosaleen,” eros becomes oath. The beloved is Ireland, but she is loved with a lover’s ferocity, even to apocalypse. Mangan’s genius lies in dangerous tenderness - devotion that never names itself as politics, yet burns with it all the same. Romantic obsession becomes a coded vow for fidelity.

Alongside these public voices stands the quieter inwardness of Mary Tighe. Her Psyche; or, the Legend of Love (Canto II) adapts classical myth into a Romantic psychology of trial, loss, and return. Love used in this sense is not conquest nor drama but moral formation coupled with interior journey. This is Irish Romanticism in a classical key, emotionally disciplined, utilizing myth as inner weather rather than spectacle.

A later restraint appears in poets such as Sir Samuel Ferguson and translators like Edward Walsh, where feeling is held back rather than paraded. Love survives not by declaration, but by endurance. Emotion moves like weather across land and sea; Ireland's sorrow has geography. Even in translation, these poems retain an oral gravity that feels older than literature itself.

Across these writers, certain truths recur. Irish Romantic love is rarely possession - it is more like fidelity itself. Waiting, enduring, returning, and loving what may never be won, dominate the poetry. What is often misread as sentimentality is in fact restraint: craft learned under threat. Saying too much could silence you; saying it plainly could erase you; saying it beautifully might let it survive.

Most importantly, this poetry refuses despair without ever lying. It is honest with itself. It does not deny suffering, resolve it, or redeem it neatly. What it rejects is despair’s final word. It insists, quietly, stubbornly, that sorrow can coexist with dignity, loss with beauty, and history with hope.

If one sentence were to be written in the margin of every Irish Romantic poem, it would be this:

These poems are not asking the world to be kind - they are choosing to remain human even when it is not.

That choice - tender and sturdy, like stone warmed by sun - is the heart of the tradition, and the reason it still speaks. ☘️



A SUMMARY OF IRISH POETRY

1. Romantic feeling in Ireland is an ethical stance, not a luxury

In much English Romanticism, emotion often functions as retreat - into nature, imagination, or private vision. But in Ireland, emotion is closer to moral resistance.

To feel deeply in a world shaped by dispossession, censorship, hunger, exile, and ridicule is already an act of defiance. Irish Romantic poetry is saying:

  • I will still love.
  • I will still sing.
  • I will still remember.

Not because it’s beautiful - but because to stop would mean surrender.


2. Irish poems are never naive - they are disciplined

What often gets misread as sentimentality is actually restraintIrish poets learned early that:

  • stating too much could get you silenced,
  • stating your feelings too plainly could get you ignored,
  • stating your art beautifully could let it survive.

As love poems carried nations,
Songs carry histories, and
Blessings carry grief without naming them.

This is not softness. It is craft under threat.


3. Love is rarely possession - it is fidelity

Irish Romantic love is not about conquest, rapture, or triumph. It is about:

  • waiting,
  • enduring,
  • returning,
  • loving what may never be “won.”

This is why separation, absence, exile, and longing dominate Irish poetry. The love worth writing about is the love that stays even when it cannot succeedThis was why Irish love poetry feels older than romance itself.


4. Song matters more than text

Another underlined truth: many of these poems were meant to be heard, not silently read. Cadence, repetition, musicality, and memorability mattered because:

  • books could be banned,
  • literacy become uneven,
  • but memory was safer than print.

Irish Romantic poetry belongs as much to the ear and the body as to the page.


5. The poetry refuses despair - but never lies

This may be the most important thing. Irish Romantic poetry does not deny suffering. It does not resolve it. It does not redeem it neatly. What it refuses is despair’s finality

It insists, quietly, stubbornly, that:

  • sorrow can coexist with dignity,
  • loss can coexist with beauty,
  • history does not get the last word.

This insistence is why Irish poems have endured.




THOMAS MOORE
(1779–1852)

Wikipedia - Thomas Moore
Moore’s Irish Melodies made him internationally famous and helped set a pattern: romantic feeling fused to national loss and cultural pride. Moore's lyric nationalism was expressed through song. Similarly, few poems capture Irish Romanticism so cleanly as “The Harp That Once Through Tara’s Halls,” speaking to music as memory, and beauty as resistance.

“The harp that once through Tara’s halls
The soul of music shed…”

What resonates here is Moore’s genius for fragile power  - no rage, no slogans, just elegy. The harp becomes Ireland herself: broken, silenced, but still sacred. Romantic love and national loss are indistinguishable. His poem is a beautifully elegiac lyric about Ireland’s lost glory, first published in Irish Melodies (1821).

The Harp That Once Through Tara's Halls
by Thomas Moore

The harp that once through Tara's halls
The soul of music shed,
Now hangs as mute on Tara's walls,
As if that soul were fled. —
So sleeps the pride of former days,
So glory's thrill is o'er,
And hearts, that once beat high for praise,
Now feel that pulse no more.

No more to chiefs and ladies bright
The harp of Tara swells;
The chord alone, that breaks at night,
Its tale of ruin tells.
Thus Freedom now so seldom wakes,
The only throb she gives,
Is when some heart indignant breaks,
To show that still she lives.



'Tis The Last Rose of Summer
by Thomas Moore

'TIS the last rose of Summer,
Left blooming alone;
All her lovely companions
Are faded and gone;
No flower of her kindred,
No rosebud is nigh,
To reflect back her blushes,
Or give sigh for sigh!

I'll not leave thee, thou lone one,
To pine on the stem;
Since the lovely are sleeping,
Go sleep thou with them.
Thus kindly I scatter
Thy leaves o'er the bed
Where thy mates of the garden
Lie scentless and dead.

So soon may I follow,
When friendships decay,
And from Love's shining circle
The gems drop away!
When true hearts lie withered,
And fond ones are flown,
Oh! who would inhabit
This bleak world alone?





JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN
(1803–1849)

Wikipedia Biography - James Clarence Mangan
“Dark Rosaleen”  is one of the great Irish poems of disguise - a love poem that is not only a love poem.
“O my Dark Rosaleen,
Do not sigh, do not weep…”

What resonates is the dangerous tenderness. The beloved is Ireland, yes, but she is loved with a lover’s ferocity, even to apocalypse. Romantic devotion becomes political vow without ever naming itself as such.

Dark Rosaleen
by James Clarence Mangan

O my dark Rosaleen,
    Do not sigh, do not weep!
The priests are on the ocean green,
    They march along the deep.
There’s wine from the royal Pope,
    Upon the ocean green;   
And Spanish ale shall give you hope,   
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My own Rosaleen!

Shall glad your heart, shall give you hope,
Shall give you health, and help, and hope,
    My Dark Rosaleen!

Over hills, and thro’ dales,
    Have I roam’d for your sake;
All yesterday I sail’d with sails
    On river and on lake.
The Erne, at its highest flood,
    I dash’d across unseen,
For there was lightning in my blood,
    My Dark Rosaleen!

    My own Rosaleen!
O, there was lightning in my blood,
Red lighten’d thro’ my blood.
    My Dark Rosaleen!


All day long, in unrest,
    To and fro, do I move.
The very soul within my breast
    Is wasted for you, love!
The heart in my bosom faints
    To think of you, my Queen,
My life of life, my saint of saints,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My own Rosaleen!
To hear your sweet and sad complaints,
My life, my love, my saint of saints,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
Woe and pain, pain and woe,
    Are my lot, night and noon,
To see your bright face clouded so,
    Like to the mournful moon.
But yet will I rear your throne
    Again in golden sheen;

‘Tis you shall reign, shall reign alone,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My own Rosaleen!
‘Tis you shall have the golden throne,
‘Tis you shall reign, and reign alone,
    My Dark Rosaleen!

Over dews, over sands,
    Will I fly, for your weal:
Your holy delicate white hands
    Shall girdle me with steel.
At home, in your emerald bowers,
    From morning’s dawn till e’en,
You’ll pray for me, my flower of flowers,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My fond Rosaleen!
You’ll think of me through daylight hours
My virgin flower, my flower of flowers,
    My Dark Rosaleen!

I could scale the blue air,
    I could plough the high hills,
Oh, I could kneel all night in prayer,
    To heal your many ills!
And one beamy smile from you
    Would float like light between
My toils and me, my own, my true,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My fond Rosaleen!
Would give me life and soul anew,
    My Dark Rosaleen!

O, the Erne shall run red,
    With redundance of blood,
The earth shall rock beneath our tread,   
    And flames wrap hill and wood,

And gun-peal and slogan-cry
    Wake many a glen serene,
Ere you shall fade, ere you shall die,
    My Dark Rosaleen!
    My own Rosaleen!
The Judgement Hour must first be nigh,
Ere you can fade, ere you can die,
    My Dark Rosaleen!





MARY TIGHE
(1772–1810)

Wikipedia Biography - Mary Tighe

Tighe’s Psyche; or, the Legend of Love retells Cupid and Psyche in six cantos, Spenserian-influenced, moving from close adaptation into freer mythic-Romantic quest and inward  development. Often overlooked, Tighe’s work is deeply Romantic in its interiority, mythic, and emotional discipline.

“Yet love is still the cause of love.”

What resonates is Mary's quiet inwardness. Love is not conquest or drama but formation, a moral and psychological journey. This is Irish Romanticism in a classical key, but the feeling is unmistakably intimate.
 



SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON
(1810–1886)

Wikipedia biography - Samuel Ferguson
“Dear Dark Head” - A poem of love so restrained it almost breaks your heart by refusing to.

“Dear dark head, that never wert
More dear to me than now…”

What resonates is the Irish emotional ethic: deep feeling held back, never paraded. Love survives not by declaration, but by endurance. This restraint is a hallmark of Irish Romantic lyric distinct from English effusiveness.

Dear Dark Head

PUT your head, darling, darling, darling,
    Your darling black head my heart above;
Oh, mouth of honey, with the thyme for fragrance,
    Who with heart in breast could deny you love?

Oh, many and many a young girl for me is pining,
    Letting her locks of gold to the cold wind free,
For me, the foremost of our gay young fellows;
    But I’d leave a hundred, pure love, for thee!

Then put your head, darling, darling, darling,
    Your darling black head my heart above;
Oh, mouth of honey, with the thyme for fragrance,
    Who, with heart in breast, could deny you love?





EDWARD WALSH
(1805–1850)

Folio - Popular Irish Songs (1883) by Walsh, Edward
Ballads, Irish, Irish poetry -- Translations into English,
English poetry -- Translations from Irish

Wikipedia Biography - Edward Walsh
Walsh’s translations of Irish-language songs preserve a romantic intensity shaped by loss and hunger.

“My grief on the sea,
How the waves of it roll…”

What resonates in their passages is the sense that love and land share a common nervous system. Emotion moves like weather; sorrow has geography. When translated, the poems retain an oral, sung quality that feels older than literature.

 

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

R.E. Slater - The Stone Lions We Mistook for Enemies



The Stone Lions We Mistook for Enemies

Consuming the Symbol, Missing the Spirit
in an Age of Idol-Making

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT


Misplaced power and piety
becomes a hunger that devours itself;
they slay the imagined lions of life
only to starve upon their stony carcasses -
Killing the living, calling it bread.
- re slater



Preface

This past August of 2025 I attempted a reconstruction of a Chinese riddle I read of in April of 2020.  I had a lot of fun with its form but grew exhausted towards the end when creating a "sideways" appendix related to America's religious and political landscape.

Today, I would like to pick up on the thoughts expressed in that 4-part Appendix and shape a concluding poetic reflection re maga Christianity and Trumpian politics. The poem will be gathered into a single, allegorical, process-inflected voice, one which leans into prophetic, meditative, and spacious reflection rather than using a more typical, polemical voice.


References

施氏食狮史 Shi-Shi. The Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den. 12 Interpretations. 6 Poems. +4 More (Appendix)

What Does It Mean?? Interpreting the Riddle of the "Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den"


Introduction

Some stories endure not because they give answers, but because they remain inexhaustible. They continue to open, to trouble, to mirror. Yuen Ren Chao’s playful yet disorienting riddle, “The Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den,” belongs to this rare class. On the surface it is a linguistic labyrinth. Beneath that surface it becomes a parable of perception itself - of how easily naming something replaces seeing the real entity of that something; teaching once again how quickly certainty substitutes for meaningful encounter, and how effortlessly the human mind turns symbol into object and object into threat.

Over time, this riddle has become for me less a puzzle of language and more a lens on culture. It exposes a recurring human pattern:

we often destroy what we do not understand, devour what we have misrecognized, and sanctify our hunger as virtue.

In this sense, Mr. Shi is not merely a fictional poet. He is a recurring posture within civilizations - political, religious, and personal.

The reflections gathered here below approach the riddle not as a clever word-game but as a living, resident allegory. They draw upon a Whiteheadian-processual sensibility, further informed by Daoist and Zen intuitions, exploring how reality itself is better understood as relational becoming rather than static cultural substance. Within such a framework, democracy is not a finished structure to be defended once-and-for-all, but an unending, evolving relationship between unlike social entities to be continuously, lovingly cultivated. Similarly, faith is never a fixed possession nor proposition - but an ongoing response to the lure of divine novelty in every moment of every day.

From this vantage, the contemporary rise of MAGA-Trumpian politics and MAGA-Christianity appears less as an anomaly and more as a tragic intensification of an ancient error: consuming the symbol while missing the spirit, attacking statues while believing we have slain monsters. The danger is not simply moral failure. It is perceptual failure - a collapse of symbolic literacy, a forgetting of how to dwell within ambiguity, and a refusal to exercise humility before reality's evolving icomplexity.


About the Poem

The poem that follows does not aim to argue in the usual sense. It seeks instead to invite a different mode of seeing. Its voice is intentionally allegorical, meditative, and spacious. It tries not to speak in a register of denunciation, but in the quieter register of lament and possibility. It gestures toward a world in which arrows are lowered, jaws are unclenched, and the long work of relational becoming can begin again.

What remains, then, is not a final word, but an opening. A cave whose entrance is still unblocked. Lions still unchewed. A future still capable of learning how to love itself into existence.



The Stone Lions We Mistook for Enemies

The Lion-Hunter walked
into his unswept cave
with a quiver full of certainties,
arrows tipped in slogans,
and eyes trained on shapes
he had already named.

This is the Lion, he said.
Here, the Threat, he remarked.
And all Evil, he flatly stated.

And so he loosed his arrows
upon stones that cracked,
dragging lion corpses in the dust
hearing echo answering echo.

But no blood ran that day.
No breath fled from living life.
Only rising dust falling
like useless prayers to vanquish.

Yet the hunter did not notice.
He dragged the stony corpses home,
stacking them like trophies
inside the chambers of his chest,
sharpening his hunger.

When he chewed,
his teeth met gravel.
His tongue met ash.
His mouth filled with the taste of nothing.

Still, it was victory he felt burning within.
Somewhere in the rubble of his ruins
lay a constitution yet breathing,
a gospel still whispering,
a democracy wanting to become.

But the Lion-Hunter could not hear them,
because listening requires disarming.
So he called judges, demons,
neighbors invaders,
life's questions treason,
and compassion weakness.

He mistook scaffolding for chains,
and tore down the erected house,
that he might feel free again.
Releasing his demons.
Quieting his fears.

He said he ate Christ.
But what he bit into was
the marble of his heart.

He swallowed crosses
without ever touching mercy.

He memorized verses
without learning their pulse.

He polished a militant savior,
cast in the image of his fear,
praying to the echo of his own voice.

When he broke his teeth
on a statue of the living God
he blamed love for being too soft.

The tragedy is not that lions were slain,
though this too often was tragic -
the tragedy is that they were never lions.
They were symbols of fear.

They were also symbols of life.
Windows to seeing.
Doorways to enter.
Invitations to love.
Stony figures pointing toward living depths.

And yet, the hunter aimed
where his heart feared,
and feared to move towards.

But a living democracy is not a fortress -
it is a living, breathing conversation.
Like a bodily constitution
birthed but not yet writ.

Nor is faith a fortress wall -
It is a wandering path moving forward.
Nor is difference a beast to be conquered -
but a life practicing more ways to sing.

Still, the Lion-Hunter
wanted obeying silence -
shaped like certainty,
and certainty shaped like control.

So the cave filled with monuments
to the hunter's own confusion.
Outside the den there were lions to kill,
that remained unchewed.

They were not stone.
But living lions.
Alive.
Breathing.
Golden with becoming.

Yet those lions did not roar
in domination -
They invited.

They did not devour -
They offered fellowship.

They did not demand whitewashing -
They offered a living participation,
until they did not
when killed.

The offer to the hunter
was to drop his strung bow,
to unclench his locked jaw,
to step into the unfinished light
of becoming,
and sit beside what he feared.

Learning and receiving
is an ever present practice.
When learning the grammar of awe.
When letting a person's rights
become a verb again.
In allowing faith to dance again.
And one's neighbor be a miracle again.

The fearsome lions were never enemies - 
They never were
what they were thought to be.

They were the many faces
of a world still learning
how to love each other
into comely existence.


R.E. Slater
February 4, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



Lessons Learned

MAGA, Misrecognition, and the Ruins of Symbolic Life

1.

They aimed at lions
and shattered statues.
They swallowed stone
and called it strength.

2.

When a culture loses the art of symbol,
it begins to eat its own metaphors
starving while chewing.

3.

Power that cannot listen
turns imagination into weapon,
and weapon into theology.

4.

The greatest danger is not false gods,
but mistaking stone for spirit
and violence for devotion.

5.

Every age is tested
by whether it can tell the difference
between what threatens it
and what invites it to become.

6.

Authoritarian faith does not believe in God.
It believes in certainty.

7.

What we consume shapes what we become.
Those who feed on fear
inherit its emptiness.

8.

The ruins of a civilization
begin where symbols are treated as enemies
instead of teachers.

9.

When power devours meaning,
it calls the hunger holy.

10.

Democracy dies first as imagination
before it dies as law.

11.

Faith dies first as relationship
before it dies as doctrine.

12.

The lion was never the enemy.
The inability to see was.


R.E. Slater
February 4, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Da Vinci's Sacred Unveiling

The Last Supper (c. 1555-1562) by Juan de Juanes
The Last Supper (c. 1555-1562) by Juan de Juanes. A Spanish Renaissance work found at the Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain. The consecration of Jesus' broken body is epitomized in his holding a broken piece of bread above his head to be shared with his twelve apostles before his crucifixion. This event became one of the major sacraments of the church commemorating Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection enunciating God's salvation to humanity through Christ.

Sacred Unveiling

Beneath stilled hands a shattered silence lies,
its sudden truths loosed before startled eyes.
Divinity clothed in brush's shadows sealed,
to souls laid bare before love's pledged reveal.

'Ere whispered wounds flying swift as steeds,
on each face lay wonder, prayer, or appeal.
At bewildered commit of fleshly Bread and Cup,
soon bereft a God bowed to human crypt.

Within pigment, line, and hue, a secret sleeps,
of waking worlds crushed on breaking day.
Where hung no mere mortal posture beaten,
broke in heart and wounded, bloodied body.

Eve's sacred table brightly burns its sorrow,
its tender grace ne'er remit its living light.
No throne nor crown was cast that night,
but selfless love poured a bursting wineskin.


R.E. Slater
February 2, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved



Sacred Bloodlines

*The Holy Grail ‘neath ancient Roslin waits.
The blade and chalice guarding o’er Her gates.
Adorned in masters’ loving art, She lies.
She rests at last beneath the starry skies....

Deeper than crypt or cloistered stone,
a heavenly Grail awakens to flesh and bone.
Not cup nor crown, but breathing, mortal line,
entwining sacred blood soaked in human tears.

In Sophie’s eyes the ages softly shine,
living truths no tomb nor code can bind.
Of One abidingly gifted unceasing love,
in redemption's endless lineage of hope.

Neither vault nor veil can secret love's lore,
where unguarded hearts had fled their tombs.
Flown on sudden wings from crypt to cross,
born resurrection's covenanted renewal.

Sacred bloodlines flow on mercy's dare,
with every soul's broken, daily sacrifice.
Whose holy fires no darkness limits,
very immortals, living Sacraments!


R.E. Slater
February 2, 2026
*verse by Dan Brown, Da Vinci Code
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved

Leonardo da Vinci's, The Last Supper (c. 1495 - 1498)

Sacred Light

The broken bread ‘neath lamplit rafters lies,
with cup of sorrow mirroring all mortal cries.
No hidden sign painted upon the supper's seal,
but waking hearts laid bare to love's unveil.

Silent murmurs ran across disciples' breaths,
God's Word incarnate sharing life and death.
Whose kingdom births whenever souls do care,
to serve, heal, or bless, either friend or foe.

No cipher traced in pigment, gold, or frame,
yet worlds ignite at hearing Mercy’s name.
In Eucharist feast that gathers love and loss,
inviting Christ as Lamb and Living Cross.

R.E. Slater
February 2, 2026
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved


FRANCE-ART-MUSEUM-LOUVRE-JOCONDE

The Code Of Da Vinci

The Code of Da Vinci
Exists not in the pictures,
Or even in his works on walls...
It is in nature of his gravitation
To this, and may be strange reflection
Of his big and wonderful forever world.

The only smile on face of Jioconda,
And you feel there-here magic of the time,
When he did live...
But what are you feeling also?
She is alive, she is living girl
In real!

Lyudmila Purgina


Poetic Notes

*Jioconda (more commonly spelled Gioconda or La Gioconda) is another name for the famous painting, "Mona Lisa," created by Leonardo da Vinci in the early 16th century.

Lisa del Giocondo is the woman widely believed to be the subject of the portrait. She was the wife of a Florentine merchant named Francesco. "La Gioconda" literally means "the Giocondo lady."

The name also carries a poetic double meaning. In Italian, gioconda is related to gioia (joy), so it can suggest “the joyful one” or “the serene one.” This linguistic nuance subtly echoes the painting’s most famous feature - her enigmatic, gentle smile.

So when the poem speaks of “Jioconda,” it is invoking both the historical woman behind the portrait and the symbolic presence of the Mona Lisa herself - a figure who has come to embody mystery, interior life, and enduring artistic vitality.

Analysis

The poem proposes that the so-called “Code of Da Vinci” is not a hidden cipher embedded in symbols, diagrams, or secret meanings within Leonardo’s paintings. Instead, it relocates the idea of a “code” away from puzzles and toward a deeper existential source. The poet suggests that Leonardo’s true mystery lies not in what he concealed, but in how Leonardo related to the world itself.

This “code” is described as a kind of gravitational pull toward reality - a profound sensitivity to nature, humanity, time, and beauty. Leonardo’s genius arises from an exceptional openness to existence, a way of seeing that allows the fullness of the world to impress itself upon his inner life. His art, therefore, is not the origin of meaning but the reflection of a vast, attentive consciousness already alive within him.

The poem focuses especially on the enigmatic smile of the Mona Lisa as a point of contact between past and present. Rather than functioning as a riddle to be solved, the smile becomes a living bridge across time. Through it, viewers feel the presence of Leonardo’s era and, more importantly, the continuing vitality of his way of seeing.

The poem’s boldest claim is that the woman in the portrait is “alive.” This does not mean biological life, but a sustained sense of presence. The painting carries interiority, emotion, and being forward into the present moment. Great art, in this vision, does not merely depict life; it participates in life by transmitting vitality itself.

Taken together, the poem reframes Leonardo’s legacy as fundamentally relational rather than cryptic. His true “code” is a mode of attentiveness so deep that it allows reality to speak through him. What endures is not a secret message, but a living quality of perception that continues to awaken wonder centuries later.

Hans Zimmer - Chevaliers De Sangreal
(Live in Prague) (with better audio)


"Chevaliers De Sangreal" is one of the most celebrated performances from Hans Zimmer’s 2016 European tour, featuring a 72-piece ensemble including the Czech National Symphony Orchestra. Featured musicians are world-class soloists like violinist Rusanda Panfili and cellist Tina Guo. This powerful and emotionally stirring orchestral composition was originally written for The Da Vinci Code soundtrack. It’s one of the climactic themes of the film, typically associated with the moment of revelation and discovery near the story’s end.

In performance, especially in the Live in Prague recording, the piece unfolds as a gradual musical ascent: it begins with soft, sustained tones and simple motifs, then builds steadily through layered strings, brass, and often choral voices. This creates a sense of growing intensity and transcendence - a musical journey from quiet mystery toward triumphant resolution.

The overall mood of the piece is epic, reflective, and uplifting. It balances moments of contemplative calm with dramatic surges of sound, giving listeners both a meditative quality and a cinematic sense of grandeur. This dynamic arc is part of why the piece resonates deeply with audiences and is frequently described as “goosebump-inducing.”

The live setting in Prague adds extra energy and richness because the acoustics of a full orchestra and possible choir enhance the emotional impact. You hear a vivid, resonant performance that feels both majestic and intimate - an experience that mirrors the dramatic scope of the original film score.

In short, Chevaliers De Sangreal is an orchestral emotional climax: serene at first and then soaring into a powerful, almost ecstatic statement of musical resolution and beauty. 

The Da Vinci Code is a 2003 thriller novel by Dan Brown that follows Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon as he investigates a murder at the Louvre, uncovering a conspiracy involving secrets about Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene hidden in Leonardo da Vinci's art, leading to a race against a shadowy organization to reveal a historical truth. The book became a massive bestseller, sparking debate over its historical and religious claims, and was adapted into a major film.