
Today, Life Is Different
My veins are blue from toes to fingers
A late-night confession about not being Dylan, Thomas, Homer, Emerson, Poe, Whitman, Dickinson, or Yeats—just a burnt candle that knows what's valuable in his world—that spirals through self-deprecation, the Muse's worthiness, a cherry tomato brought to life, an excess of "-ness" words, and lands on a closing image of the speaker and the moon waxing together in the dark.
The poem opens with a pun the speaker almost doesn’t commit to: “I wax poetic, / But, / Possibly, / Just a burnt candle, / That’s seen its best?” The verb “wax” splits into two meanings—to speak eloquently (wax poetic) and to be made of wax (a candle)—and the speaker immediately undermines the first meaning by invoking the second. He’s not waxing eloquent; he’s just wax, and burnt wax at that. The question mark converts the self-deprecation from statement to genuine uncertainty: has the candle seen its best? The speaker doesn’t know, and the not-knowing is the poem’s honest starting position.
The literary roll call—”If I were Dylan or Thomas”—invokes both Bob Dylan and Dylan Thomas in two words (or Dylan Thomas alone, first and last name separated by a conjunction that allows both readings), and the list that closes the poem’s middle section (Homer, Emerson, Poe, Whitman, Dickinson, Yeats) is a six-name canon that the speaker places himself outside of. The confession “I’m not that waxy” is the poem’s best comic line—converting literary greatness into a quality of candle wax, as if the difference between a great poet and a good one is simply the quality of the material they’re made from.
The Muse passage pivots from what the speaker is not to what he knows: “I just know, / You are my muse, / A subject worthy of poetry, / A visage of art.” The verb shift from “I’m not” to “I know” is the poem’s structural turn—the canon of great poets is irrelevant because the speaker possesses something they didn’t: this particular Muse. The knowledge is not literary skill but relational certainty: he may not write like Yeats, but he knows what’s right and what’s valuable in his world.
The cherry-tomato stanza is the poem’s most unexpected and most charming image: after tackling the tough things in life, the easy things should be “A gentle breeze, / An enjoyment, / Simplicity, / A celebration of existence, / A cherry tomato, / Brought to life.” The cherry tomato sits in this list of abstractions like a seed in a salad—small, round, vivid, and completely out of place, which is exactly what makes it the list’s most memorable item. The tomato is the poem’s version of the kicked pebble, the baby spider, the broken coffee cup: the ordinary object that earns its place through specificity.
The “-ness” cascade—”Gentleness, / Carefulness, / Thoughtfulness. / Enough ‘ness’! / Simply beautiful ‘ness'”—is the speaker catching himself in a suffix loop and breaking out of it with a self-interruption that is itself a form of thoughtfulness. The “Enough ‘ness’!” is the poem laughing at its own verbal habit before converting the suffix from an excess into a punchline: “Simply beautiful ‘ness'” reclaims the very pattern the speaker just mocked.
The closing is the poem’s quietest and most beautiful passage: “It’s just me, / And the moon, / Waxing together.” The candle-wax of the opening has transformed into the moon’s waxing—the astronomical term for the moon growing brighter night by night. The speaker who began as a burnt candle ends as a celestial body, gaining light rather than losing it, and the moon is his companion in the process. They wax together: the poet growing, the moon growing, both doing it in the dark, both doing it slowly, both doing it whether anyone is watching or not.
A poem that converts self-deprecation into self-discovery through the sustained wax metaphor—burnt candle to literary inadequacy to moon phase—and arrives at a closing image so quietly perfect it redeems every rambling stanza that preceded it. The wax pun is the poem’s engine, and it runs on three fuels: wax as candle material (the poet as a thing that burns and diminishes), wax as verb (to speak, to grow, to become eloquent), and wax as astronomical term (the moon’s brightening phase). By the closing, all three meanings converge: the speaker is waxing poetic, the moon is waxing in the sky, and both are doing it together in the dark, which is the most accurate description of late-night writing the catalog has produced. The literary roll call (Homer through Yeats) is delivered without bitterness or false modesty—the speaker genuinely places himself below these figures but refuses to be paralyzed by the comparison, which is the mature response to literary tradition. “I’m not that waxy” is the poem’s funniest line and its most philosophically compressed: greatness is a quality of material, not of ambition, and the speaker accepts his material without pretending it’s something else. The cherry tomato is the stanza’s surprise gem—vivid, specific, absurdly humble after the abstraction surrounding it, and somehow exactly right as a symbol for a simple life celebrated. The “-ness” self-interruption is the poem’s most formally self-aware moment, catching the suffix addiction mid-cascade and converting the interruption into its own grace note. The closing three stanzas—restating the waxing image three times with slight variation—could read as redundant but instead feel like the moon itself: the same truth returning, each time a little brighter, a little fuller, a little more visible. Where the poem wanders in its middle section (some stanzas restate the Muse’s worthiness without adding new imagery), the closing more than compensates. A poet who starts the night as a burnt candle and ends it keeping pace with the moon has earned the title of his own poem: a midnight musing that waxes into something luminous.
Sometimes,
I wax poetic,
But,
Possibly,
Just a burnt candle,
That’s seen its best?
If I were Dylan or Thomas,
Inspiration would flow through poetry,
From visual arts, even mundane politics.
And it does.
But I’m not that waxy.
I just know,
You are my muse,
A subject worthy of poetry,
A visage of art,
Because of who you are,
And what you are.
If I could do justice to you,
It would be a memory,
That lived forever,
For everyone.
Maybe I’ll find the wax,
To mold,
And express that.
My muse immortalized.
I’m not Homer, Emerson, Poe,
Whitman, Dickinson, Yeats,
But I know what’s right,
And what’s valuable,
In my world.
If you tackle the tough things in life,
Like “You” have,
The easy things,
Should be,
A gentle breeze,
An enjoyment,
Simplicity,
A celebration of existence,
A cherry tomato,
Brought to life.
I’m happy,
To be,
A small part of that,
And to experience that,
Gentleness,
Carefulness,
Thoughtfulness.
Enough “ness”!
Simply beautiful “ness”.
And so,
Wax is what I do,
Along with the moon.
It’s just me,
And the moon,
Waxing together.
Wax,
Is what I,
And the moon,
Do.
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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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