Obelisks

by Paul Hartal

Let me remember old trails
Let me weep over lost loves
They are all the same love
But different

Let me remember old trails
Cherry trees along muddy roads
And ancient obelisks
They are now so different
But still the same

Let me remember missteps
Let me regret wrong paths
They are all the same path
But different

The seasons always alter
Or they hardly ever change
Only the hours pass
Time stands still
And your love is mine

Let me remember old lanes
Let me weep over old loves
They are all different
But still the same

Let me remember good times
Life in its fleeting flight
Days of yore that vanished
They are still the same
But different

The seasons always alter
Or they hardly ever change
Only the hours pass
Time stand still
And my love is yours

Let me take new roads
Let me praise new loves
They are all the same love
But different

From: 
Paul Hartal, Love Poems; Montreal: Editions La Galerie Fokus, 2006, p. 37




Paul Hartal's picture

ABOUT THE POET ~
A man of many Odysseys, Paul Hartal is a Canadian poet, author and artist born in Szeged, Hungary. His critically acclaimed books include Postmodern Light (poetry, 2006), Love Poems (2004), The Kidnapping of the Painter Miró (novel, 1997, 2001), The Brush and the Compass (1988), Painted Melodies (1983) and A History of Architecture (1972) ., In 1975 he published in Montreal A Manifesto on Lyrical Conceptualism. Lyco Art is a new element on the periodic table of aesthetics, which intertwines the logic of passion with the passion of logic. In 1980 the Lyrical Conceptualist Society hosted the First International Poetry Exhibition in Montreal., In 1978 Hartal exhibited his paintings at the Musée du Luxembourg and the Raymond Duncan Gallery in France and his canvas Flowers for Cézanne won the Prix de Paris. He also has displayed his oeuvre in museums and galleries in New York, Montreal, Budapest, as well as many other places., He approaches poetry with the credo that the heart of poetry is the poetry of the heart. A recurring theme of his recent work explores the human tragedies of wars and genocides.


Last updated March 11, 2012