If We Live Again 
If we live again 
then I’ll come back 
as all your relatives – 
mother, father, 
sister, brother; 
all the elements of my love 
dispersing 
into their own personhoods 
and forming 
a family crafted 
by love’s center; 
yet freely 
asking nothing 
not even 
“Do you remember?” 
By Jane Roberts 
Past Lives (to Rob) 
In what past lives 
did we live before? 
My cells remember 
what my brain does not recall. 
Your touch 
sends images flying up 
like leaves rising in a wind 
from silent layers 
underground. 
They stir, brilliant, 
up to the edge of thought 
and die; return, go back 
to settle in my spine 
untouched but sensed, 
locked in secret 
codes of bone. 
Not memories, but whole 
enclosed moments burst 
and disappear, 
found and lost, surely 
forever gone, 
and yet 
your touch calls them up 
like bubbles 
from the muffled breath 
of some submerged fossil 
that still buried 
is intact, not dead 
but only dreaming. 
By Jane Roberts 
IF WE LIVE AGAIN Or, Public Magic and Private Love 
Prentice-Hall; 1982 
Cover flap: 
“When we write poetry we ask questions of the heart rather than the intellect. It’s as if we somehow know that the real answers slip between our rational thoughts; or even suspect that on occasion our feelings are the answer.”  
Jane Robert’s collection of essays and poetry explores the connections between love, enhanced perception, and unofficial speculations. [..] She lets the “magical reasoning” of the heart examine questions that the intellect alone can’t answer. In particular, she deals with love as an altered state of consciousness and considers the sometimes embarrassing questions that love asks of religion and science alike – questions that lead to what she calls “the magical approach” to love and life itself. 
She explores personal love whether the love object is a person, a cause, an idea – or an aspect of nature, and praises the power of the emotions as they correlate with the ever-moving forces of the seasons. She also stresses the importance of self-love, maintaining that it leads ultimately to a greater sense of unity with nature and existence. Opening pathways to deeper levels of perception, If We Live Again encounters one of love’s greatest questions: “Do we live again? What are the many possible versions of immortality that might preserve our loves – and our lives themselves? 
JANE ROBERTS (1929-1984) has published over a dozen volumes of prose and poetry, novels and fictions. 


Aucun commentaire:
Publier un commentaire