
Memorable piece, read by Leonard in interviews, in VERY deep voice. You can hear it on Master Poems CD.
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----------------------------------------------------Book of Mercy, I, 8
In the eyes of men he falls, and in his own eyes too. He falls from his high place, he trips on his achievement. He falls to you, he falls to know you. It is sad, they say. See his disgrace, say the ones at his heel. But he falls radiantly toward the light to which he falls. They cannot see who lifts him as he falls, or how his falling changes, and he himself bewildered till his heart cries out to bless the one who holds him in his falling. And in his fall he hears his heart cry out, his heart explains why he is falling, why he had to fall, and he gives over to the fall. Blessed are you, clasp of falling. He falls into the sky, he falls into the light, none can hurt him as he falls. Blessed are you, shield of falling. Wrapped in his fall, concealed within his fall, he finds his place, he is gathered in. While his hair streams back and his clothes tear in the wind, he is held up, comforted, he enters into the place of his fall. Blessed are you, embrace of the falling, foundation of the light, master of the human accident.
Only in short, as I have to rush for another work, this piece seems like consequent elaboration of motif of the FALL, as motif goes back and forth from literary to metaforical fall. Also, very pregnant word in terms of Christianity and I guess Judaism also, as Western civilisation is the result of the fall from Eden. I. e. "In Abrahamic religion, The Fall of Man or The Story of the Fall, or simply The Fall, refers to humanity's fall from a state of innocent bliss to a state of sinful understanding. The cause of this Fall was disobedience to God and the result of it was that humankind could no longer remain in God's Garden of Eden, or walk in the sight of God." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fall_of_Man). I guess that's the fall which is the subtext of this psalm #8.
Also, the most important notion is, I believe, that only in this fall we are what we're supposed to be. Without being in the state of the fall(ing), we're actualy not humans. Within the fall, as we fall, we're gathered in, we're comforted. The fall is condition humana. That's not far from Cohen's much later (2000s) position that we're free only when we accept what we are. That was mentioned much earlier in this thread, in our discussion about the Will.
Also, we have the SHIELD, one of possible titles Leonard had for Book of Mercy, and again YOU, now "clasp of falling", "embrace of the falling", You who's blessed, the higher (of highest) instance according to whom the fall is happening and into which we're ultimately, I'd say, drawn, the instance to whom this book is dedicated as the whole, and You which is its main theme.