When I went out to kill myself, I caught
A pack of hoodlums beating up a man.
Running to spare his suffering, I forgot
My name, my number, how my day began,
How soldiers milled around the garden stone
And sang amusing songs; how all that day
Their javelins measured crowds; how I alone
Bargained the proper coins, and slipped away.
Banished from heaven, I found this victim beaten,
Stripped, kneed, and left to cry. Dropping my rope
Aside, I ran, ignored the uniforms:
Then I remembered bread my flesh had eaten,
The kiss that ate my flesh. Flayed without hope,
I held the man for nothing in my arms.
from Collected Poems
Wesleyan University Press, 1971
All our good deeds, all our goodness itself, if we betray that one friendship, are for nothing.
3 comments:
A brilliant poem. Thank you for posting it.
Wow. Intense.
And I just read your piece in First Things. Terribly sobering; I can't imagine it being someone I know...
We miss you here.
Yes, I love this poem, though maybe "love" is the wrong word. I'm just stunned by it. And it's from very early in Wright's career, too. His later work was much looser formally, and very powerful in its own way, but nothing else quite has the punch of this poem.
Sheila -- we miss you, too! Janet and Bill were here for the Triduum and left this morning, about five minutes before I got home from singing the 9 am Mass. We kept them up WAAAY too late last night after the Vigil, so do spare them a prayer for a safe drive home.
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