And I Said to My Soul, Be Loud by Christian Wiman
I am the sound the sun would make if the sun could make a sound
And I Said to My Soul, Be Loud
Madden me back to an afternoon I carry in me not like a wound but like a will against a wound Give me again enough man to be the child choosing my own annihilations To make of this severed limb a wand to conjure a weapon to shatter dark matter of the dirt daubers' nests galaxies of glass Whacking glints bash-dancing on the cellar's fire I am the sound the sun would make if the sun could make a sound and the gasp of rot stabbed from the compost's lumpen living death is me O my life my war in a jar I shake you and shake you and may the best ant win For I am come a whirlwind of wasted things and I will ride this tantrum back to God until my fixed self, my fluorescent self my grief-nibbling, unbewildered, wall-to-wall self withers in me like a salted slug
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Originally published in Hammer Is the Prayer: Selected Poems (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016)
Wiman's all over Gerard Manly Hopkins!
Absolutely relatable for the people of faith.