Breakthroughs

Breakthroughs

The American poet Louise Glück has just been awarded this year’s Nobel prize for literature.

Here is one of her poems:

Celestial Music

I have a friend who still believes in heaven.
Not a stupid person, yet with all she knows, she literally talks to God.
She thinks someone listens in heaven.
On earth she's unusually competent.
Brave too, able to face unpleasantness.

We found a caterpillar dying in the dirt, greedy ants crawling over it.
I'm always moved by disaster, always eager to oppose vitality
But timid also, quick to shut my eyes.
Whereas my friend was able to watch, to let events play out
According to nature. For my sake she intervened
Brushing a few ants off the torn thing, and set it down
Across the road.

My friend says I shut my eyes to God, that nothing else explains
My aversion to reality. She says I'm like the child who
Buries her head in the pillow
So as not to see, the child who tells herself
That light causes sadness-
My friend is like the mother. Patient, urging me
To wake up an adult like herself, a courageous person-

In my dreams, my friend reproaches me. We're walking
On the same road, except it's winter now;
She's telling me that when you love the world you hear celestial music:
Look up, she says. When I look up, nothing.
Only clouds, snow, a white business in the trees
Like brides leaping to a great height-
Then I'm afraid for her; I see her
Caught in a net deliberately cast over the earth-

In reality, we sit by the side of the road, watching the sun set;
From time to time, the silence pierced by a birdcall.
It's this moment we're trying to explain, the fact
That we're at ease with death, with solitude.
My friend draws a circle in the dirt; inside, the caterpillar doesn't move.
She's always trying to make something whole, something beautiful, an image
Capable of life apart from her.
We're very quiet. It's peaceful sitting here, not speaking, The composition
Fixed, the road turning suddenly dark, the air
Going cool, here and there the rocks shining and glittering-
It's this stillness we both love.
The love of form is a love of endings.

Here is what Dan Chiasson, in the October 8 New Yorker article “How Louise Glück, Nobel Laureate, Became Our Poet” had to say about her poetry:

“Her work is thrilling and surprising; it’s both intimate and grand; she appeals to people who read only poetry and to people who read almost no poetry. It is various enough to appeal to all temperaments, often in the same poem: here is a line for the skeptic, here’s one for the pushover…Her poems are anathema to easy comfort, and often seem to ban or forbid the going and conventional emotional logic. And yet people read them to know the contours of their own inner lives.”

In a different vein, here is what Pope Francis said in the latest encyclical, Fratelli Tutti:

“221…No one can possess the whole truth or satisfy his or her every desire, since that pretension would lead to nullifying others by denying their rights. A false notion of tolerance has to give way to a dialogic realism on the part of men and women who remain faithful to their own principles while recognizing that others also have the right to do likewise. This is the genuine acknowledgment of the other that is made possible by love alone. We have to stand in the place of others, if we are to discover what is genuine, or at least understandable, in their motivations and concerns.”

A renowned woman poet and a visionary male religious leader have similar insights. Both bring us challenge, enlightenment, guidance, wisdom, and the promise of a freedom and affirmation that opens new worlds for thousands more of all genders with the same incalculable gifts, lauded or not, of their own.

The examples, the prospects, are breathtaking. Is a breakthrough at hand at last?

So often, a poet expresses it best:

Snowdrops

Do you know what I was, how I lived?  You know
what despair is; then
winter should have meaning for you.

I did not expect to survive,
earth suppressing me. I didn't expect
to waken again, to feel
in damp earth my body
able to respond again, remembering
after so long how to open again
in the cold light
of earliest spring--

afraid, yes, but among you again
crying yes risk joy

in the raw wind of the new world.

4 Responses

  1. Marian Ronan says:

    Thanks, Ellie. Makes me think I really have to read Louise Glück!

  2. Regina Bannan says:

    Ellie, I am so glad to read Gluck’s poetry. Thanks.

  3. These essays and poems nourish my spirit when most needed: now!

  4. In the quotation from Fratelli Tutti, I would have included the first sentence: “Such a covenant also demands the realization that some things may have to be renounced for the common good.” What about renouncing patriarchy? I wholeheartedly recommend this “breakthrough” book:

    What They Don’t Teach You in Catholic College
    Women in the Priesthood and the Mind of Christ
    John Wijngaards, Acadian House Publishing, 2020
    https://www.acadianhouse.com/What_They_Dont_Teach.php

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