In
Poems of
Devotion: An Anthology of Recent Poets, editor Luke
Hankins assembled a collection of poems illustrating how poets from T.S. Eliot
to Ilya Kaminsky had used the poem as a devotional practice. In Weak
Devotions: Poems, he’s written poems as devotions himself, and an
extremely fine collection they are.
And
what inspires Hankins to utilize poetry as a devotional practice? The origin of
words. The sight of blood. A newspaper photograph of children in Africa
skipping through a swarm of locusts. War. Beauty. Growing up in Louisiana. Instructions
to “follow the instructions.” Squirrels. A father’s sorrow. Anxiety disorder.
In
other words, life, all of the events and issues and problems and wonder that
comprise life.
And
life includes the things we envy, including the unusual things we might envy, as
in Weak Devotion XIII:
I
have envied , yes,
the
dog that cannot think of hell—
I
have envied the dust mite,
the
palm tree and the stone.
And
can I say
(can
I tell You Something
I’ve
never told You before?)
that
I have envied nonthings
because
they do not exist.
A
dust mite, a palm tree a stone – these things cannot think; they simply exist.
Even a dog, which does have cognitive abilities, cannot think of Hell. And this
ability to think ultimately links us to “You,” and all the questions we want
addressed, the suffering we want relieved.
Hankins
groups the poems into four sections, named for one of the poems in the group: A
Shape with Forty Wings, Babel’s Child, Weak Devotions, and The Voice of One
Crying Out. Many of the poems read like prayers, or psalms, perhaps prayers and
psalms, the prayers and psalms of a poet in the 21st century and yet
timeless.
To
read these poems is to undertake an exercise in silence and quiet, because that
is what they impart, a stilling of the mind and heart. Reading these poems I
found myself listening, listening to that stillness, that quiet.
Several
of the poems have been previously published in journals like the Asheville Poetry
Review, American Literary Review, and Southern Poetry Review, or published in
anthologies.
Read
the poems of Weak Devotions in the
early morning, or before going to bed, or in the middle of the day to find
respite from the busyness of work. But read them.
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1 comment:
This sounds like a marvelous, inspirational collection of poems. I'll check it out. Thanks, Glynn!
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