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Monday, August 07, 2006

More from Mary Karr

Descending Theology: Christ Human

Such a short voyage for a god,
and you arrived in animal form so as not
to scorch us with your glory.
Your mask was an infant's head on a limp stalk,
sticky eyes smeared blind,
limbs rendered useless in swaddle.
You came among beasts
as one, came into our care or its lack, came crying
as we all do, because the human frame
is a crucifix, each skeletos borne a lifetime.
Any wanting soul lain
prostrate on a floor to receive a pouring of sunlight
might--if still enough,
feel your cross buried in the flesh.
One has only to surrender,
you preached, open both arms to the inner,
the ever-present hold,
out-reaching every want. It's in the form
embedded, love adamant as bone.
In a breath, we can bloom and almost be you

2 comments:

  1. Wow! A beautiful poem. Where did you find it? I'd like to read more of Karr's writing.

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  2. It's from her new collection of poems, Sinners Welcome. Which includes a fantastic essay at the end on faith and poetry, and her relatively recent conversion to Roman Catholicism.

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