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November 29, 2012

Thursday Poem

Let me tell you about my marvelous god


Let me tell you about my marvelous god, how he hides in the hexagons
of the bees, how the drought that wrings its leather hands
above the world is of his making, as well as the rain in the quiet minutes
that leave only thoughts of rain.
An atom is working and working, an atom is working in deepest
night, then bursting like the farthest star; it is far
smaller than a pinprick, far smaller than a zero and it has no
will, no will toward us.
This is why the heart has paced and paced,
will pace and pace across the field where yarrow
was and now is dust. A leaf catches
in a bone. The burrow’s shut by a tumbled clod
and the roots, upturned, are hot to the touch.
How my god is a feathered and whirling thing; you will singe your arm
when you pluck him from the air,
when you pluck him from that sky
where grieving swirls, and you will burn again
throwing him back.


by Susan Stewart
from Columbarium
(University of Chicago Press, 2003)

Posted by Jim Culleny at 06:27 AM | Permalink

Comments

Nice!

Posted by: Raza Husain | Nov 29, 2012 9:11:54 PM

Dear Jim,

How do you understand "An atom is ... far smaller than the zero" even in the context of the poem ?

yours truly,
Sumiran

Posted by: Sumiran | Nov 30, 2012 9:38:17 AM

Sumiran—

Beyond conventional thought: smaller even than that conceived in our ordinary sense of size.

Beyond the expected.

Practically infinitesimal.

The atomic version of the other extreme: what we can only imagine is the boundary of the universe.

The Tao that can be spoken is not the real Tao. The Tao that can be named is off the mark.

Posted by: Jim | Nov 30, 2012 10:14:40 AM

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