lazariuk wrote:
The poem you are looking at is "The Unclean Start"
Much later he wrote
"Starting is second
First we must part"
do you think that might relate?
Don't know, Jack. Many of his encounters, according to my reading, are adjustments to parting and starting. I think I'll bring my personal experience in on this one to say that it must be nice to relate to someone (speaking as a woman) who would be wililng to begin again after the unclean start. The parting would not be so painful armed with the knowledge that it was for a new beginning. BTW, as a poet, Leonard refers to wives in several places. My understanding of this is that although not legally tied, he morally obligated himself until those relationships expired, etc. charla
p.s. maybe it's like this: I've been reading from
The Art of Worldy Wisdom, by Baltasar Gracian. Entry 217 reads, "Neither love nor hate forever. Trust the friends of today as if they will be enemies tomorrow, and that of the worst kind. As this happens in reality, let it happen in your precaution. Do not put weapons in the hand of deserters from friendship to wage war with. On the other hand,
leave the door of reconciliation open for enemies, and if it is also the gate of generosity so much the more safe. The vengeance of long ago is at times the torment of today, and the joy of the ill we have done is turned to grief."