Worship: A Pantoum
by Paul Hooker
Ps. 19:1-4
The night’s as silent as the shrouded dead.
We mime our parts in plays we did not write.
Stars applaud the empty stage instead.
The curtain falls. We bid you all goodnight.
We mime our parts in plays we did not write.
The cast bows low and utters not a sound
as the curtain falls. We bid you all goodnight;
ushers, pass the offering plates around.
The cast bows low. Is uttered not a sound
in praise or parody of our feeble play,
while ushers pass the offering plates. Around
you are the words; no one will say
if praise or parody. Our feeble interplay
is all the rage in fashionable conversation.
But you are the words. How can one say
what’s written on the day before creation?
And so we rage in fashionable conversation.
But still no match for chaos, storm, and spark.
What’s written? On the day before creation
we meet no gods awaiting in the dark.
We’re no match for the chaos, storm, or spark
the stars applaud. On the empty stage, instead,
we meet no gods. But, waiting in the dark,
the nights are silent as the shrouded dead.
Note: I’ve been exploring apophatic theology lately: building a theology not from what we can say about God, but from what we cannot; not from what we supposedly know, but from that which is veiled in mystery and darkness; not from what is revealed, but from what hides from revelation. It seems to me the pantoum is a nearly perfect form for such explorations. Its repeated lines circle back on themselves, exposing unexpected nuances in their stair-step repetition. Its rigid structure requires the poet to stay within strict limits and not run loose in flights of metaphorical fancy. The result is a series of stanzas fairly bursting with possibilities for meaning, while never quite tipping their hand.
Reading this poem, I learned about pantoums, and the preferences of stars. Given the language of the heavens and the efforts of humans to speak of and to God, does God prefer one expression over another, or is the Holy One gracious enough to appreciate the efforts of each member of creation, regardless of their placement on earth or the firmament? Thank you for giving my brain a powerful jolt of wonder.
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I can hardly be happier than to know that this poem is “a powerful jolt of wonder.” Lord, now lettest thy servant depart in peace….
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I also learned about Pantoums! The term is not in the dictionary, but thanks to your recommendation, I have a copy of A Poet’s guide to Poetry by Mary Kinzie. On page 432 it defines the Pantoum. Question, isn’t the final line supposed to repeat the first? or is this “poetic license?” I love the fact that you are working with highly formalistic poetry. After preaching on Psalm 19 last Sunday, I particularly enjoyed your poetic insight. Beautiful poem; profound insight on silence; thank you for sharing!
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You’re right, of course. I guess this is my tiny rebellion.
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Paul: Wonderful poem. I like writing poems to form also, and find it challenges me to make the best choice and use for words. This one is powerful. Good job.
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