PART FOR THE WHOLE
by Robert Francis
When others run to windows or out of doors
To catch the sunset whole, he is content
With any segment anywhere he sits.
From segment, fragment, he can reconstruct
The whole, prefers to reconstruct the whole,
As if to say, I see more seeing less.
A window to the east will serve as well
As window to the west, for eastern sky
Echoes the western sky.
(
go to the Poetry Foundation to read the rest...)
I took this picture of last night's sunset. My classroom window to the east showed me the sunset first, reflected in the snow on the rooftops and in the windows of the condos that stand directly across from the school's side yard. I grabbed my camera and ran to the other side of the building. As I stood and watched the sun set, this column of light developed and magnified and intensified.
In this particular case, I would have to say that the
whole was greater than the
parts. The view to the east had nuthin' compared to the view to the west. I never could have reconstructed that column of light.
Later last night, when I was checking the day's Tweets, I followed
Cloudscome's link to her photo blog and found that she had taken almost the exact same picture.
In this particular case, I would have to say that the
parts are greater than the
whole, or at least equal to it: two pairs of eyes (probably
more than two pairs, how can we ever know?) seeing the same sunset in two different places, cameras ready and aimed, capturing and recording one moment of our planet's great beauty.
Now the really amazing part. I found this poem by searching "frost on the window" because it is so cold here (windchills of 20 or more degrees below zero) that the typical condensation on the inside of the kitchen window is frozen. On the INSIDE of the window. I intended for my Poetry Friday entry to be about the cold. But I guess that sunset wasn't quite done with me. I leave you to ponder whether that is the
whole speaking directly to one of the
parts through poetry.
The round up today is at
Karen Edmisten's "Blog With a Shockingly Clever Title."