New Consciousness Review December, 2014 | Page 21

INSPIRATION Virgil and Homer, Dante and Milton, Rumi and Hafiz, Du Fu and Basho, poets of the Ramayana and griots from Africa, shamans from Indonesia and Australia, Murasaki Shikibu, Emily Dickenson and Jane Austen, Hayden and Tennyson, Chief Seattle and Black Elk, Rumi and Milarepa, Shakespeare, Celtic Merlin…and so many other keepers of the living presence. The power of women and the feminine spirit weaves throughout—the freestanding muse, goddess, and Earth Mother to all things sacred; witness to the Truth. Science, religion, culture, and the humanities is another collective theme undergirding the writing. Although the cast of characters is primarily disembodied spirits, this epic presents wholly perceptible concerns about the meaning of modernity (“a shallow culture undermines everything”), as well as the flourishing of the human spirit, using modern and accessible language and traditional iambic verse. However, the experience of reading this book defies attempts to describe it: poetry, like any art, 21 | NEW CONSCIOUSNESS REVIEW means many things to many people. For this reader it was like being enfolded into a glorious, celestial, orchestral song in which every instrument is finely tuned, timed, and vital to the whole, with different melodies coming together as a single motion to do something none of them could do alone. “Always the world awaits the poet who can find the right words, more so now than ever,” says Tolstoy, final words of counsel to Persona after his many crossings. In this book are such words and the author, like Gandhi, must surely be “wrapped in selfless practice”—dedicating thirty years of his life to finding them on our behalf. Parliament of Poets is a worthy literary masterpiece, the author a curator of the human story, and the book a living cultural artifact. Once read, you know your life was impoverished without it. Review By Julie Clayton