On coming back from Salt Spring and being in awe of how God reveals himself through His creation, this poem reminded me of all the life that is breathed into one tiny tide pool. One line that rings true on a Saturday morning: "The universe is not only stranger than we think, it is stranger than we can think." Beautiful.
Poem on a Line by Anne Sexton,
'We are All Writing God's Poem'
by Barbara Crooker
Today, the sky's the soft blue of a work shirt washed
a thousand times. The journey of a thousand miles
begins with a single step. On the interstate listening
to NPR, I heard a Hubble scientist
say, "The universe is not only stranger than we
think, it's stranger than we can think." I think
I've driven into spring, as the woods revive
with a loud shout, redbud trees, their gaudy
scarves flung over bark's bare limbs. Barely doing
sixty, I pass a tractor trailer called Glory Bound,
and aren't we just? Just yesterday,
I read Li Po: "There is no end of things
in the heart," but it seems like things
are always ending—vacation or childhood,
relationships, stores going out of business,
like the one that sold jeans that really fit—
And where do we fit in? How can we get up
in the morning, knowing what we do? But we do,
put one foot after the other, open the window,
make coffee, watch the steam curl up
and disappear. At night, the scent of phlox curls
in the open window, while the sky turns red violet,
lavender, thistle, a box of spilled crayons.
The moon spills its milk on the black tabletop
for the thousandth time.
3 comments:
Sometimes seems life runs in a straight line. I just can't seem to run the same line.
I love the pictures of the girls and the Crocker poem. I have a book of her poems but it looks like I'm going to have to get another. Where did you find this poem?
Dave, it came via Garrison Keillor's "The Writer's Almanac" last week...
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