22 December 2020

The Wild Hunt

I believe in the Wild Hunt
On this longest night of the year
When wolves howl at a never-setting moon
And it seems Sun has succumbed
To a long diminution
And the enduring chill pierces
To my very joints and marrow.

Odin rides forth with his hell-hounds,
And woe betide the mortal in their path!
They thirst for innocent souls,
Through endless night they hunt,
Transforming moon to blood,
Blacking out the very stars
By their grim and hungry passing.

And yet on this midwinter's night
I believe not in Odin's Wild Hunt,
But that of a more ancient god,
One who seeks souls with a fiercer hunger,
Who set out on an impossible raid, risking all
To plunder the hoard of Death itself
And win forth into the dawn of an undefeated Sun.

26 June 2020

Starlight from the Night-Cloud

Note: This is a poem I curated by feeding the first two lines of T. S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" into the GPT-2 text generator at https://talktotransformer.com/, selecting the best output, and then feeding more lines in for auto-completion. Not bad for a robot!

Starlight from the Night-Cloud
A. I. Eliot

The red-bed sparrows flutter on the gray windowpanes
Just over the churchyard wall
The twinkling stars flow across the cold dusk
amidst the rose-colored smile of the autumn night
Light and dark, hope and despair,
grace and frolicking triumph and affliction,
death and life all with their cherubic faces
spun into another world -- into another world,
the leaves are falling, and the birds have fled to their holes
and the deep shadows from the chalets lie upon the grass
and the starlight shines from the clear night-cloud;
the sound of the love-songs from the hills echoes to and fro
and the high hopes of many voices who have yet to be heard;
There is a tumult of people and a multiplicity of voices;
And they are dancing.

25 April 2020

Meet me



Meet me
in the quiet of the morning
in the red teakettle
in the candle lit against darkness
in the water and the Word
in the bread and the cup

On Being Half Dead


This morning I awoke at 4:45 with a keen sense of my own mortality. As I lay in bed listening to the dripping of the April rain and the occasional call of an overzealous early bird, a voice told me, "You're 38 and a half years old."

"Mmm," I mumbled, and rolled over to get some more sleep.

"A lot of people don't live till 80."

I rearranged my pillow.

"And you're obese. The BMI chart says so."

"Sure," I responded, sitting up and scowling a fat scowl. "People used to die before 80 quite a bit. But as Mrs. Lucy Nell Crater said, 'They wasn't as advanced as we are.' We're living longer these days.

"Look at this COVID-19 thing," I continued. "We've basically crippled our whole national economy in order to extend the lives of 50,000 Boomers long enough to vote for Trump again this November." I knew this was unfair and likely inaccurate, but being tired makes me cranky and cynical. I rubbed my eyes, keenly aware that in doing so I was also touching my face.

"We love keeping people alive longer than nature intended, and we're getting better at it all the time. But even if we weren't, and even if I'm halfway to death, 77 would be a great age to die at. It's the product of two primes. Now will you please shut your stupid imaginary mouth so I can get some more sleep?"

"Your Uncle Jim died real young," the voice continued. "What was he? 40? 45?"

I gathered the blanket around me and squeezed my eyes shut.

"You know the one! Worked for the Kansas Department of Wildlife or something?"

I began humming "Samson" by Regina Spektor to shut the voice out.

"You remember! Taught your mom to play poker when she was a little girl by holding her on his lap during games? Bald as a boulder? Loved beer and watermelon? Favorite ice cream was Rocky Road? And say, don't you love poker and beer and watermelon and Rocky Road? And you started balding at 22."

"Look, you... whatever you are. I'm fine with dying. Lived a good life. Ready to meet my Maker and all that. So whatever you're trying to do, it's not working." I rolled over and rearranged the blankets again. Next to me, Magen stirred. Shoot. Maybe I should get up so at least one of us could get some more sleep.

"'A good life,'" the voice rejoined. "Let's talk about that. What have you accomplished, really?"

I sighed and gave in. "My wife and I survived a couple of really hard years of marriage, and we are closer now after 15 years than we've ever been. We have four beautiful kids who don't behave like monsters. I have a cookie cutter house in the suburbs and a yard full of dandelion skeletons and two used vehicles and two brand new pairs of nice running shoes. I make six figures at a stimulating, enjoyable, and low-stress job. My relationship with God has seldom been stronger, and I'm learning to play the piano and teaching my four-year-old to read."

"Six figures, huh? Nice. But as Mr. Shiftlet said, 'There's some men that some things mean more to them than money.'" I could hear the voice's invisible smirk. "See? You're not the only one who can quote Flannery O'Connor all willy nilly. How's that Beowulf novel coming?"

"It's not. I put it on hold in February to write a commentary on Romans."

"Oh, another unfinished project. What a surprise. And how is Romans coming?"

"I'm on verse 4," I responded.

"Still in the first chapter?" the voice asked. "How many verses are there in Romans?"

"I think there are 434."

"I'm just gonna do some quick math here... Oh my. It's going to take you 23 years at this rate. You'll be lucky if you're still alive by then. After all, dear sweet Uncle Jim--"

"I'm sick of your lip, imaginary adversary. The bottom line is this: I'm doing the best I know how to do with the resources I have. I'm keeping my family alive, I'm making really good software for my customers, and I'm making it a priority to write. I'm sorry if it doesn't come up to your impossible standards. I'm giving what I've got."

"Just a couple more questions, " the voice said. "I promise. What apps do you have on your phone?"

"Um. The usual stuff. Email, Spades, Netflix, podcasts, news--"

"And how much time," the voice interrupted, "would you say you spend immersed in that tiny enormous digital world that you can exercise complete control over (and also completely controls you)?"

"Maybe... 20 minutes a day?"

"That's not what your phone says, and you know it," the voice said. "Try 85 minutes a day. And how long do you spend watching TV shows with your wife in the evenings?"

"Um. Maybe about an hour, most nights?"

"And when was the last time you read a novel or book of poetry... or any book, really?"

"Not sure. Maybe January? But I do read to the kids pretty much every day."

"So," the voice said, "You're giving everything you've got... except for the 15% of your waking day that you're essentially pissing away."

Now I was mad. "Just who do you think you are, anyway? What gives you the right to talk to me like this?"

The voice softened. "I'm you. The obnoxious, driving part of you. My job is to make sure we don't have any regrets. We've used half of our time here already. We're feeling deader every day. Haven't you noticed your hair turning gray? Or that your knees get sore after a five-mile jog?"

"Yeah," I said. "I guess I have."

The voice continued. "Can we use our time any better? I think..." It faltered, just for a moment. "I think the world really needs what we have to give. Is there any way we can give it more faithfully? Remember what Annie Dillard wrote:
One of the few things I know about writing is this: spend it all, shoot it, play it, lose it, all, right away, every time. Do not hoard what seems good for a later place in the book, or for another book; give it, give it all, give it now. The impulse to save something good for a better place later is the signal to spend it now. Something more will arise for later, something better. These things fill from behind, from beneath, like well water. Similarly, the impulse to keep to yourself what you have learned is not only shameful, it is destructive. Anything you do not give freely and abundantly becomes lost to you. You open your safe and find ashes.
After Michelangelo died, someone found in his studio a piece of paper on which he had written a note to his apprentice, in the handwriting of his old age: "Draw, Antonio, draw, Antonio, draw and do not waste time."
I sighed, rolled out of bed, and pulled on my pajama pants. I shuffled out of the bedroom, resisting the urge to grab my phone on my way out.

As I measured out the water for my pot of coffee, I said, "Fine. I'll write for a couple of hours. But after that, can we have a nap?"

"Oh, you poor simple fool," the voice said. "Don't you know we can only nap when the kids are napping? By the time you're done writing this morning, they'll be up and hungry for breakfast and Dad Time. Maybe we can nap when we're dead. Just another half-life to go."

Note: Just as I finished the final paragraph, this happened: 

03 January 2020

A Prayer Before Debugging



















Almighty Mender
Who works order from chaos,
Who delights
In making broken things new,
Be my Wisdom this day.
Reveal to me the source
Of this problem that preoccupies me,
This error unseen
And unforeseen,
The subtle bug
That wrenched my best-laid plans
Utterly out of joint.

Remind me,
O my Peace,
That I am dust and ashes.
You can accomplish all things
In a single master-stroke;
I cannot.
Let me sit with these truths
And be satisfied --
Even delighted --
In them.

Deliver me from
Pride,
Despair,
Frustration,
From an irritation
That lashes out in anger.
May the grace of my Savior
Overflow from my mind,
My lips,
My hands,
As I interact with others
Who also bear Your image,
Others for whom You paid
The same unspeakable price.

May I move slowly
And thoughtfully today,
Taking small steps
With wide eyes
As I ask, seek,
And knock my way through
This troublesome bit of code.
May I persevere in faith,
Following in Your footsteps,
O Great Redeemer of all things,
Remembering
That those who ask shall receive,
Those who seek shall find,
And those who knock
Shall see doors opened.

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