The Object
. . . celui qui trouve son emploi dans la
contemplation d’une pierce verte . . .
—St.-John Perse
He who finds his business in the slow,
persistent study of one green stone,
even a plain one chosen, let us say,
from a plenitude of greater green;
and who, in choosing green, abandons blue
to its own scholar, snubs all reds, rejects
the dark persuasions of persistent black;
and whose choice of stone as well reflects
the surface of a world neglected—not
without pain, but without regret—of things
crying out their equal worth, their need
to have their facets noted, diamond rings
and the humblest wooden chair alike
in the futile clamor of the claims they make
upon the student, who, studying his one
green stone, considers that, and that alone.