
In Silver Sheets
Two millennia whisper their wisdom— a quiet hymn
An Epicurean love poem that draws on two thousand years of philosophical wisdom to argue that the highest pleasure is not indulgence but simplicity—silver sheets, double-dark chocolate gelato, a smile that lights the night—culminating in a catalog of thirteen Epicurean definitions that collectively define the Muse as the poet's philosophy of life.
This is Plahm’s most intellectually grounded poem—a piece that names its philosophical source (Epicurus, 341–270 BC) and then demonstrates the philosophy through sensory experience rather than lecture. The opening—”Two millennia whisper their wisdom— / a quiet hymn of thought for you”—establishes the poem’s temporal scale: this isn’t a contemporary lifestyle trend but a 2,300-year-old tradition of thinking about happiness, and the poem is its latest hymn. The “silver sheets, moonlit cool” of the title are the poem’s governing image: sheets that are both literal (a bed, a place of rest and intimacy) and metaphorical (a surface that reflects, like silver, whatever light falls on it). The moonlight makes the sheets cool and luminous, not hot—this is Epicurean pleasure, which values tranquility over intensity.
The gelato passage is the poem’s most sensuous and its most precisely Epicurean: “a joyful glutton / luxuriating in cold, sensuous / double-dark chocolate gelato, / whipped cream gliding smooth / like silk on silver sheets.” The speaker declares himself a glutton but immediately qualifies it: this is one bowl of gelato, savored slowly, not a binge. The simile—whipped cream on gelato compared to silk on sheets—collapses the culinary and the intimate, the dessert spoon and the bedroom, into a single texture. The word “gliding” is the key: Epicurean pleasure doesn’t grab or devour; it glides.
The philosophical turn—”Calmness over noise, / fondness over extravagance, / a daily devotion to love / in words and action”—is the poem’s most direct statement of values, structured as a series of preferences (this over that) that echo Epicurus’s own method of defining happiness by subtraction: not more pleasure but less disturbance, not greater stimulation but deeper appreciation. “I choose just enough” is a three-word Epicurean manifesto.
The thirteen “Epicurean” definitions that close the poem are a formal innovation unlike anything else in the catalog. Each begins with the same word and offers a slightly different facet of the same concept, like thirteen panels of a single stained-glass window. The definitions circle, overlap, refine: simplicity, wisdom, friendship, freedom from judgment, quality over excess, moderation, the present moment. The repetition is not redundancy but meditation—the way a prayer wheel returns to the same words with deepening understanding on each revolution. The final definition—”True happiness isn’t a speculative future; / it’s the refined pleasure of the now”—is the poem’s philosophical thesis and its love-poem thesis simultaneously: the Muse is not a fantasy of the future but a refined pleasure of the present.
The Greek term “Ataraxia”—tranquility of mind—appears as a glossary entry, grounding the poem in its classical source. Plahm doesn’t use the word in the poem’s body; he places it at the threshold between the lyric and the definitions, like a keystone holding both halves together. The entire poem has been describing ataraxia without naming it: the silver sheets, the moonlit cool, the gelato savored slowly, the smile that lights the night. Tranquility isn’t the absence of feeling; it’s feeling distilled to its essence.
A poem that succeeds by doing something rare in the catalog: slowing down. Where many Plahm poems accelerate toward their climax through accumulation, fire, or cosmic expansion, this one decelerates—savoring each image, each sensation, each word the way the speaker savors gelato. The pacing is the poem’s most Epicurean quality: it refuses to rush, and the refusal is itself a philosophical statement. The gelato passage is the poem’s sensory peak, and the silk-on-silver-sheets simile is one of the most texturally accomplished images in recent work—the reader can feel the glide. The “this over that” structure (calmness over noise, fondness over extravagance) is an effective formal device that translates Epicurean philosophy into personal preference without pedantry, and “I choose just enough” is a line that carries the weight of an entire ethical system in four words. The thirteen Epicurean definitions are the poem’s most ambitious formal gambit—a closing catalog that could have been a glossary appendix but instead functions as a meditation, each restatement deepening the concept the way repeated listening deepens a piece of music. The risk of redundancy is real, and some definitions (“simple well prepared meals shared with friends” and “A luxury of simple excellent food, friendship of considerate friends”) occupy very similar territory. But the accumulation serves the Epicurean method: wisdom doesn’t arrive in a single statement but through patient, repeated attention to the same truth from multiple angles. The connection between the Muse and the philosophy is the poem’s emotional achievement: “Your virtue is my pleasure, your smile—my philosophy” converts the beloved from the object of desire (the catalog’s usual register) into the embodiment of a way of living, which is a more mature and more sustainable form of devotion than the burning of “Incendium” or the gravitational collapse of “Your Gravity.” The Greek term Ataraxia is well-placed as a bridge rather than an ornament—it doesn’t show off the poet’s learning but names the condition the poem has been building toward. Where the poem could tighten is in the transition between the lyric first half and the definition catalog; the shift in register is abrupt, and a bridging passage that moved more gradually from poetry to philosophy might have made the structural seam less visible. But the overall effect is of a poem that practices what it preaches: refined, unhurried, grateful, and genuinely wise. A poem that proves the best things in life are simple, well-prepared, and shared.
Two millennia whisper their wisdom—
a quiet hymn of thought for you,
silver sheets, moonlit cool, breathe serenity—
reflecting the finer gifts
personal bonds bestow.
The rare light in my life—
you show the way,
a companion of deep thought.
I’m Epicurean today—
tonight, a joyful glutton
luxuriating in cold,
sensuous double-dark chocolate gelato,
whipped cream gliding smooth
like silk on silver sheets.
From flavors to feelings, I savor you—
my rarest delight.
A connoisseur of your beauty,
witness to your luminous humor.
Calmness over noise,
fondness over extravagance,
a daily devotion
to love in words and action.
I choose just enough,
honor presence,
find tranquil pleasure in yours.
If two thousand years of wisdom endure,
then let’s rediscover
Epicurean grace—
you,
a simple delight
whose smile lights
my night.
Moonlit silver sheets shimmer,
skin-soft, whispering affection,
in this delicious pleasure,
in your presence,
I find the Epicurean dream—
friendship—
deepened into freedom,
simplicity
steeped in wisdom.
Your virtue is my pleasure,
your smile—my philosophy.
Tonight I say:
thank you.
Ataraxia – Tranquility of mind
Epicurean
The place, the thought, the moment of appreciation.
Happiness through simplicity, wisdom, experience, and friendship.
Epicurean
The definitive term of someone who enjoys fine food, wine, and luxury—
a connoisseur of pleasure with moderation and inner peace as guidelines.
Epicurean
A simple, fine meal shared with friends, savored slowly, with joy of companionship.
Epicurean
A luxury of simple excellent food, friendship of considerate friends, and freedom from judgement.
Epicurean
Ancient wisdom, modern appreciation: refined pleasure, not indulgent.
Epicurean
Happiness rooted in freedom from want, surrounded by friends who do not judge, and share in the quiet abundance of a simple moment.
Epicurean
Seeking quality not excess, simple well prepared meals shared with friends.
Epicurean
Values of life bring wisdom, depth and meaning to life.
True value of experience not quantity of consumption consumed.
Epicurean
A lifestyle. Finely focused on what and who is important.
Epicurean
The importance of simplicity, wisdom, and the joy of shared experiences.
Epicurean
A celebration of life’s pleasure, pursued with moderation and a deep appreciation for the present moment.
Epicurean
An ideal about finding happiness in the simple, yet profound aspects of life.
Epicurean
True happiness isn’t a speculative future; it’s the refined pleasure of the now.




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