Concerning the Book that is the
Body of the Beloved
Resurrection of the body of the
beloved,
Which is the world
Which is the poem
Of the world, the poem of
the body.
Mortal ourselves and filled
with awe,
we gather the scattered limbs
Of Osiris.
That he should live
again.
That death not be oblivion.
When I open the book
I hear
the poets whisper and weep,
Laugh and lament.
In a thousand languages
They say
the same thing:
“We lived. The secret of life
is love, that casts its
wing
over all suffering, that takes
in its arms the hurt child,
that
rises green from the fallen seed.”
Sadness is there, too.
All
the sadness in the world.
Because the tide ebbs,
Because wild
waves
Punish the shore
And the small lives lived there.
Because the
body is scattered.
Because death is real
And sometimes death is
not
Even the worst of it.
If sadness did not run
Like a
river through the Book,
Why would we go there?
What would we
drink?
Oh, there’s blood enough, and
sap
From the stalks. Tears, too.
A raindrop and the dark water
Of bogs.
It’s a rich ink.
Indelible, invisible
(hold up the page to the
light,
hold the page near a flame).
The world comes into the
poem.
The poem comes into the world.
Reciprocity – it all comes down
To
that.
As with lovers:
When it’s right you can’t say
Who is kissing
whom.
Lighten up, lighten up.
Let
go of the heaviness.
Was it a poem from the Book
That so weighed you
down?
Impossible. Less than a
feather.
Less than the seed a milkweed
Pod releases in the
breeze.
Lifted, it drifts out to
settle
In a field, with all that’s inside it
Waiting to become
Root and
tendril, to come alive.
Now the snow is falling
Even
more than an hour ago.
The pine in the backyard
Bows with the weight of
it.
Two years ago, my father
Died.
What love we had
Hidden under misery,
Weighed down with years
Of
silence.
And now,
Maybe the poem can
free
Us, maybe the poem can express
The love and let the rest
Slide to
the earth as the snow
Does now, freeing the tree
Of its burden.
To be alive: not just the
carcass
But the spark.
That’s crudely put, but . . .
If we’re not supposed to
dance,
Why all this music?
Time to shut up.
Voltaire
said the secret
Of being boring
Is to say everything.
And yet I held
Back about
love
All those years:
Talking about death
Insistently, even
As I was
alive;
Talking about loss
As if all was loss,
As if the world
Did
not return
Each morning.
As if the beloved
Didn’t long for
us.
No wonder I go on
So. I go on
so
Because of the wonder.
~ Gregory Orr ~
(Meridian, Issue 14, Fall/Winter
2004)