
Today, Life Is Different
My veins are blue from toes to fingers
A five-line poem in which statues—the civilization's permanent monuments to beauty—collapse in worship as the Muse walks past them, undone by the knowledge that their carved perfection can never know the living original.
Five lines. One image. A complete argument about the inadequacy of art in the face of actual beauty. The poem takes the most durable human creation—the statue, built to outlast centuries, to represent ideal form in stone or marble or bronze—and breaks it. Not through time, not through weather, not through war, but through proximity to a woman walking by.
“Statues crumble / To their knees” performs two simultaneous actions. The statues are physically collapsing (crumbling, falling apart) and devotionally genuflecting (dropping to their knees in worship). The verb “crumble” insists that the kneeling is not voluntary but structural—the statues don’t choose to kneel; they lose the ability to stand. The Muse’s beauty is not flattery but a force, a gravitational field that disassembles whatever claims to permanence it passes near.
“After you pass” is the poem’s temporal precision: the statues don’t crumble while she is present but after she has moved on. She doesn’t witness her own effect. The destruction happens in her wake, in the turbulence she leaves behind, the way a ship’s wake rocks boats it has already passed. The Muse is unaware of the wreckage, which makes her more devastating, not less—unconscious power is more threatening than deliberate power because it cannot be negotiated with.
“Knowing / They can never know you” is the closing couplet and the poem’s deepest cut. The statues possess knowledge—they “know” something—but what they know is the impossibility of knowing her. They are aware enough to understand their own limitation: they are representations of beauty, and she is beauty itself. The gap between representation and reality is unbridgeable, and the statues’ crumbling is their acknowledgment of that gap. A statue of Venus can stand for millennia; it cannot survive a woman who makes Venus look like a rough draft.
The poem connects to the catalog’s recurring meditation on art versus life (“Truth”‘s confession of limitation, “The Critic I Am”‘s dust mote, “Ancient Parchment”‘s skin-as-manuscript) but compresses the argument to its most radical expression: art doesn’t just fall short of the Muse; it physically disintegrates in her presence. The poem itself—five lines, no ornamentation, no metaphor beyond the central image—enacts the argument by being as minimal as possible, as if even the poem knows better than to try to compete with what it describes.
The most compressed poem in the catalog that achieves genuine philosophical weight—five lines that contain a complete argument about beauty, permanence, art, and the gap between representation and reality. The central image—statues crumbling to their knees—is the poem’s entire achievement, and it is a formidable one: the image fuses physical collapse with devotional gesture, structural failure with worship, in a way that makes both readings operate simultaneously rather than one metaphor serving the other. The temporal detail “After you pass” adds a dimension most five-line poems couldn’t fit: the Muse is already gone, the destruction happens in her absence, she doesn’t know what she’s done. This transforms the beauty from a spectacle (look at what she does to statues) into a force of nature (she alters the physics of the room whether she’s watching or not). “Knowing / They can never know you” is the closing’s most intellectually ambitious move—attributing consciousness to stone, giving the statues the one capacity their material denies them (knowledge) and then making that knowledge a form of suffering (knowing the impossibility of knowing). The poem is a paradox engine: the things built to last forever are destroyed by the thing they were built to represent; the things that know beauty best are the things that know they can never possess it. Where the poem’s brevity is both its power and its risk: at five lines, it is more epigram than poem, more inscription than meditation—the kind of thing that could be carved on a pedestal, which, given the subject matter, would be the ultimate ironic gesture. A single additional image—what the statues were before they crumbled, or what the Muse looks like to warrant the destruction—might have given the reader more to hold. But the poem’s austerity is its conviction: it knows that describing the beauty would be as futile as the statues’ attempt to embody it, so it describes only the effect. A poem that crumbles on purpose.
Statues crumble
To their knees
After you pass.
Knowing
They can never know you.
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"Musings to a Muse"
This poem is part of a 28-page poetry collection by David Plahm, released in
December 2024. The "Musings to a Muse" collection is now available in hardcover and ebook.
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