Monday, June 7, 2010

Staying Power...

This poem, by Jeanne Murray Walker, speaks beautifully to why a person can doubt and still believe. This is what it means to write hope.

Staying Power

(In appreciation of Maxim Gorky at the International Convention of Atheists.
1929)

Like Gorky, I sometimes follow my doubts

outside and question the metal sky,

longing to have the fight settled, thinking

I can’t go on like this, and finally I say


all right, it is improbable, all right, there

is no God. And then as if I’m focusing

a magnifying glass on dry leaves, God blazes up.

It’s the attention, maybe, to what isn’t


there that makes the notion flare like

a forest fire until I have to spend the afternoon

dragging the hose to put it out. Even

on an ordinary day when a friend calls,


tells me they’ve found melanoma,

complains that the hospital is cold, I say God.

God, I say as my heart turns inside out.

Pick up any language by the scruff of its neck,


wipe its face, set it down on the lawn,

and I bet it will toddle right into the godfire

again, which--though they say it doesn’t

exist—can send you straight to the burn unit.


Oh, we have only so many words to think with.

Say God’s not fire, say anything, say God’s

a phone, maybe. You know you didn’t order a phone,

but there it is. It rings. You don’t know who it could be.


You don’t want to talk, so you pull out

the plug. It rings. You smash it with a hammer

till it bleeds springs and coils and clobbered up

metal bits. It rings again. You pick it up


and a voice you love whispers hello.