Poetry

(October 2001)


Copyright (c) 2001 First Things 116 (October 2001): 9-31.

Marsh Time

To age is but to respect gravity,
movement that is denial given up
in the fashion of prayer: on one’s knees
and thankful perhaps to finally pause.

Even the cockroach, large and hard-backed, slows
as if to attract the descending heel,
letting perpetual generation
care for itself in the shadowy corner.

The arthritic cypress has no age,
never having been young, its gnarled grip
sufficient, and its fall unwitnessed,
the swamp collecting all of its debts.

—Robert Parham

The Dying Man’s Will

Trim my nails before I die.
My Maker would approve
of crossing t’s and dotting i’s.
The details much I love.

My bank account make ready,
each decimal in its place.
I want my money exactly recorded
before I meet Him face to face.

My garden—especially the dill and cumin—
ensure it’s green and tall.
I want to point to my little Eden
when asked about the Fall.

Provide the priest with written sermon
detailing all the works I’ve done.
I want my memory etched in memory
when all my praise is sung.

—Bruce W. Speck