
In Silver Sheets
Two millennia whisper their wisdom— a quiet hymn
A sustained meditation on the Muse's natural, unadorned beauty and the transformative effect of her presence on the poet's self-understanding. The central metaphor—the Muse as sunrise whose light allows the poet to see himself—develops a theory of grace as something that only becomes visible when reflected back by another person.
Published the same day as “My Garden Fable,” this poem operates in the opposite register: where that piece used comic deflection to arrive at philosophical truth, “Illumination” works through direct, unguarded sincerity. The opening question—”How is it / You are always / So / Effortlessly / Beautiful?”—establishes the poem’s method. The line break after “So” creates a pause that performs the speaker’s genuine bewilderment; “Effortlessly” lands as its own revelation before “Beautiful” completes the thought. The word “effortlessly” is doing critical work across the entire poem: the Muse’s beauty is defined not by appearance but by the absence of performance. The catalog that follows—”Your graceful walk, / Your tender comments, / Your attentive presence, / Your kindness, / Your compassion”—uses anaphoric “Your” to build a portrait constructed entirely from observed behavior rather than physical description. This is significant: in a poem about beauty, Plahm refuses to describe the Muse’s body, hair, or face. Instead, beauty is located in motion (“graceful walk”), speech (“tender comments”), and attention (“attentive presence”). “No makeup. / Hair totally as is”—the colloquial “totally as is” breaks any poetic register, grounding the observation in the everyday. This is not a blazon; it’s a man noticing his companion hasn’t put on lipstick and finding that more beautiful than if she had. The poem’s philosophical core arrives in the mirror section: “You become / A mirror— / A way to examine myself.” The Muse-as-mirror is a common enough trope, but Plahm earns it by specifying what the mirror does: it doesn’t flatter, it reveals. The speaker doesn’t see himself as beautiful in her reflection—he sees himself as capable of growth. “My, / How much I’ve / Experienced / And grown / Since you appeared” uses the old-fashioned exclamatory “My,” which reads as both genuine surprise and self-aware formality. The sunrise/sunset cycle that structures the poem’s second half (“You’re a glow / I look forward to, / Like the sunrise” through “Another tomorrow’s sunrise / Captivating”) creates a daily rhythm: each encounter is a sunrise, each departure a glorious sunset, each return a new dawn. The theological implications are understated but present—this is a devotional poem disguised as a love poem. “I am only / As bright in a sunrise / As my muse / Sees me” is the poem’s thesis statement and its most vulnerable confession: the poet’s self-worth is contingent on the Muse’s regard. This is both a beautiful admission and a dangerous one, and the poem doesn’t flinch from either reading. The lipstick stanza near the end—”When you / Wear / Lipstick / It’s not / For me. / It isn’t necessary”—circles back to the opening’s anti-cosmetic argument with devastating simplicity. The line breaks isolate “Wear” and “Lipstick” as if the poet is puzzling over why anyone would add to what’s already complete. “Cripes—” is the poem’s single moment of Plahm’s comic voice breaking through, a self-interruption that acknowledges the earnestness has reached a pitch that even the speaker finds almost embarrassing. And the closing—”Still, / I see you / And I hope / One day / You’ll see me too”—reveals the asymmetry at the heart of the entire catalog: the poet sees the Muse with extraordinary clarity, but isn’t sure she sees him back. The italicized final line, “every rose-colored sunrise,” operates on three levels: literal sunrise imagery, the rose garden from “My Garden Fable” published the same day, and the idiom “rose-colored glasses” gently inverted—the speaker knows his vision may be tinted, and he doesn’t care. Within the catalog, this is one of the most nakedly sincere Muse poems, stripped of the wordplay, structural tricks, and comic deflection that characterize much of Plahm’s work. Its power and its limitation are the same thing: it trusts plain speech completely.
A poem that succeeds through the accumulation of quiet, observed details rather than through any single pyrotechnic moment. The anti-blazon strategy—defining beauty through behavior rather than physical description—is both philosophically interesting and emotionally generous, and the lipstick stanzas achieve a plainspoken tenderness that resists sentimentality through sheer specificity. The sunrise/sunset cycle provides genuine structural architecture, and the mirror metaphor earns its place by specifying what reflection reveals: not flattery but growth. “Cripes—” is perfectly placed, a pressure valve that acknowledges the poem’s sincerity without undermining it. The vulnerabilities are real: at this length, the poem’s reliance on direct statement (“You are / Totally authentic,” “You are / Real / Seen / And Important”) occasionally tips from plainspoken into prosaic, and several stanzas restate what earlier stanzas have already established. The catalog of virtues in the first third—walk, comments, presence, kindness, compassion—lacks the compression that Plahm’s best lists achieve; each item could use the kind of specific, grounded detail that “Hair totally as is” provides. But the closing three stanzas rescue the whole: the “Cripes—” self-interruption, the admission of hope for reciprocal seeing, and the italicized “every rose-colored sunrise” that links this poem to its companion piece published the same day. Paired with “My Garden Fable,” the two June 1 poems form a complete emotional portrait: the comic gardener who can’t stay angry at a deer, and the earnest lover who can’t stop watching the sunrise.
It’s my life experience.
How is it
You are always
So
Effortlessly
Beautiful?
No
Embellishment.
Your graceful walk,
Your tender comments,
Your attentive presence,
Your kindness,
Your compassion.
No makeup.
Hair totally as is.
Completely,
Naturally—
You.
Where does that
Come from?
It’s you.
It lives in you—
That gracious movement
Of thought for others,
Your quiet, inner grace.
Always conscious
of others.
My short times
With you
Are always rewarding
Leading to truths
I never knew
And explorations
Unknown before.
When I leave you,
I am in awe.
You are
Totally authentic.
You become
A mirror—
A way to examine myself
Something genuine,
Something
I can only hope
Will reflect in me.
My,
How much I’ve
Experienced
And grown
Since you appeared.
You’re a glow
I look forward to,
Like the sunrise.
When I leave:
A sunset – glorious
With a smile
That kills and lingers,
And pulls me back—
Another tomorrow’s sunrise
Captivating.
My muse
Is special
A contemplation
On life.
I am only
As bright in a sunrise
As my muse
Sees me.
I have learned
That grace is not always seen
Until it’s reflected
And returned
By the one
Who sees it.
I’m a
Witness
It’s
Like a sunrise
Illuminating.
When you
Wear
Lipstick
It’s not
For me.
It isn’t necessary.
You are
Real
Seen
And Important.
You
And I
Are.
Cripes—
Sometimes
I don’t have
A Clue
How much
My life
Has changed.
Still,
I see you
And I hope
One day
You’ll see me too.
As I see you—
every rose-colored sunrise.




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