The Sophist’s Dilemma

Two Poems by Peter Bethanis

 


Editor’s Note: We're pleased to republish these poems in Talking Writing as part of the TW Reading Series, with permission of the poet and the original print journals. Here, Peter Bethanis explores the disillusionment of middle age and the search, in suburbia, for purpose. “The Sophist’s Dilemma” previously ran in the Spring 1996 issue of The Wallace Stevens Journal, and “The Sophist’s Cellar” originally appeared in the Spring 1996 issue of Tar River Poetry.

Peter is also a visual artist, and as part of this TW Reading Series feature, we've included several images by him.

“1” © Peter Bethanis; used by permission

The Sophist’s Dilemma

Like an insect’s stinger,
the church steeple punctures the sky.
Dusk sifts through backyards
where porch lights burn, and the star’s
dead light returns, disillusionment finally conquering
even the most congenial boy scout
sometime around the age of thirty.

Along rows of houses, orange windows glow
and a man sits half-asleep in front of the television,
something in the workday still banging in his head
as if he’s holding on to a frazzled rope, swinging inside a bell.
The knot of his hand
grips the chair as he contemplates the walk
up the stairs, as if he were a circus animal
performing a silly charade of an act,
his real capability held sadly behind the eyes.

 

 

 

“No 73” © Peter Bethanis; used by permission

The Sophist’s Cellar

With just the right amount
of useless junk, loneliness is bearable,
as a whole lifetime may putter by
searching for the lost wrench
that keeps one feeling busy.

The sophist conjures the image
of a beautiful woman, her slender hand
shading her eyes as she leans back
onto his imaginary bed.
Where can one go to escape
the unfunny sitcom of a burned-out marriage,
or the local minister with the nervous tic,
who tries to sell heaven
as if it were real estate?

Shelves of jars filled with a dozen varieties
of nails, a stool and a workbench,
the old television with its one fuzzy station
are the sophist’s company.
Spontaneity seems more suited
to the gods or the young at this point.
Still, desire braids itself together in the heart
like a pair of snakes, intertwined,
exotic, beating beneath the pulse
that longs for intimacy
as the weeks drone on,
and the neighbors settle for shooting
just over par, being born again,
looking busy without purpose
across the pent-up silence
of their immaculate lawns.

 

 

 

“The Architect's Tuesday” © Peter Bethanis; used by permission


Art Information

Peter BethanisPeter Bethanis grew up in rural Maine and currently lives in Indianapolis, Indiana. He is a writer and an artist. Peter’s writing has appeared in Poetry, America, and Tar River Poetry, as well as in more than sixty other literary journals. His work has been recognized by former US Poet Laureate Donald Hall and James Dickey, author of Deliverance. He is the author of two books, Dada and Surrealism for Beginners (For Beginners, 2007) and American Future (Entasis Press, 2009).

Peter's artwork has appeared in several galleries and in literary magazines such as the Adirondack Review, Indianapolis Review, and HCE, the literary magazine of University College Dublin.

For more information, visit Peter Bethanis’s website.

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