For those of you not familiar with the 4 Quartets, this poem is more specifically in response to the final stanza of East Coker, which is the second part of Eliot's poem. It's interesting (at least to me) that when Eliot wrote East Coker he was supposedly struggling with an issue similar to what I'm currently mulling over - does it really make any sense to keep writing poetry? Well at least in the present case I decided in the affirmative, if only in order to muster my reply to gloomy TS.
Home is not just
where we start
But where we arrive
in the end
As the world becomes more
familiar
Not less so once we notice
(despite all pride and learning)
The recurring patterns of our dreams
Sure there will be time for this and that
Until we begin to comprehend
Until we begin to comprehend
A present that
consists of no single moment
But a
great chain of being and nothingness
Connecting stone to
plant and plant to man
Yet all immortal in our
yearnings to make
A new beginning from each end
All dolmens speak of
time forgotten
In starlight that
sweeps across the heavens
And lamplight that flickers
and dims
Words elide and worlds
collide
Photographs curl at
their edge
And fall into desuetude
But it’s the endless waves
Of wind water and
light
That propagate and proclaim
To petrel and
porpoise alike
Not in things themselves
But in the undulation unceasing
There we'll find unity and perpetuity
Neither in what is or is not there
Neither in what is or is not there
But in the Nothing that remains
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