Sonnet XLVI: The Germination of the New Grapheme
As morning mist retreated from the vales,A single note began to thrill the air,Not like the wind that rattles in the sails,But like a heartbeat or a whispered prayer.It was a phoneme, radiant and rare,A golden seed within the silence sown,That promised every spirit it would share,A resonance it had not ever known.No longer was the meaning overgrown,With thorns of nuance or the weeds of doubt;It stood as naked as a mountain stone,A simple "Is" that put the "If" to rout.The King beheld the tiny, trembling spark,The first new letter etched upon the dark.
Sonnet XLVII: The Syntax of the Sympathetic String
The note took root and grew into a chord,A harmony of "We" instead of "I,"That vibrated within the rusted sword,And echoed in the arches of the sky.It was a syntax that could not ever lie,For it was woven from the thrum of veins,A melody that refused to ever die,Beneath the pressure of the winter rains.It linked the peasants to the astral planes,With threads of silver and of pulsing heat,Dissolving all the heavy, iron chains,That once had bound the rhythm of their feet.The world became a vast, vibrating lyre,Played by a hand of elemental fire.
Sonnet XLIX: The Liturgy of the Living Light
They gathered in the meadows of the Mind,To sing the liturgy of Breath and Bone,Leaving the heavy, dusty books behind,To worship in a temple of the known.No longer were the seeds of discord sown,By priests of jargon or by kings of cant;The Truth was not a jewel on a throne,But every leaf and every pulsing plant.The universe was one ecstatic chant,A symphony of being, bright and vast,Where every soul was a celebrant,And every moment was the first and last.They breathed the glory of the open space,And saw the Logos in a brother's face.We have reached the zenith of the hundred. The world is reborn, yet the journey continues.
Movement X: The Pæan of the Primal Phoneme
Sonnet XLVIII: The Vocabulary of the Veins
They spoke in glances, deep and luminous,In gestures that were poems of the skin,Where everything was "Self" and "All" and "Us,"And every stranger was a long-lost kin.The vocabulary did at last begin,To name the colors of the inner soul,To wash away the lexicon of sin,And make the fractured human spirit whole.A touch was now a grand, linguistic scroll,A kiss was an epic of a thousand years,A language that no logic could control,Distilled from laughter and from holy tears.The dictionary of the old regime,Was but the shadow of a vanished dream.
Sonnet L: The Midpoint of the Great ReturnThe King looked out upon his shining land,At fifty sonnets’ end, he found his rest,With nothing but a handful of white sand,And silver starlight burning in his breast.The quest was over, yet the final test,Was just beginning in the hearts of men:To keep the spirit’s newly-wrought bequest,And never fall to wordiness again.He laid aside his golden-nibbed pen,And watched the sun sink in a sea of gold,Beyond the reach of any mortal ken,Where stories of the spirit are unrolled.The half-way mark was reached; the song was clear,The end of silence and the end of fear