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On the Anthropic Principle




On the Anthropic Principle - Craig Erick Chaffin

 Here at the spoke-ends of our galaxy 
it is easy to forget the central axle 
moving insensibly slow, still 
the silvery-white dispersion of stars 
soothes randomly until we impose a pattern, 
like the Magi, like the Greeks. 

And despite the most accurate of calendars, 
dawn remains a wager until the great lion of the sun 
peers over the plains with a growl of heat 
and the day blooms and withers toward the violet hour 
where even wise men arrive as strangers 
because the arrangement is never the same. 

As the latest layer of bones, 
can we ever appreciate how far 
the swan's neck stretched to uphold the head, 
the spider's strand thinned without snapping? 
Do we recall the dark alternatives dodged, 
any of which could unmake us? 
Always there were detours 
where the river never creased the rock 
that never rose from the sea 
that never spawned a single fossil. 

When light illuminates the Grand Canyon 
in winter's slant at sundown, 
the stripes of ages burn 
with every visible color. 
What is the color of a radio wave?
Only a man asks that.




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