Tag: hope

  • A Poem About a Hope

    The following is a poem I wrote very recently, based on a very true event. It’s most-likely unfinished, but I wanted to share it anyway. Merry Christmas!

    I walked over the hill, at dark,
    Past the willow by the frozen pond,
    Then slowed my gait and steeled my gaze
    ‘Cause something caught my eye beyond.

    Make it newfound love, this thing I sense,
    Or a run-in with a few old friends,
    Or at least an angel singing songs, I prayed,
    And prophesying better days.

    Finally, the lamplight bent just right,
    So I could see the sad, and sadly funny, sight.
    A goose stood upright on the ice
    Alone, there in the dark of night.

    I walked as close as I could get,
    And saw the goose was frozen stiff,
    Unmoving,
    Motionless as a monolith.

    Afraid the ice would not support my weight,
    I recommenced along the normal way,
    But the goose was frozen in my foremost thoughts.
    I ruminated, thinking of the poor bird’s fray.

    Webbed feet frozen to the icy pond,
    He must have flailed his wings and yanked.
    But, in the end, instead of freezing contorted
    Like a scared, pathetic, dying thing,
    He stood up nobly like a king,
    And gave his life into a marble work
    Of Michelangelic beauty–quiet, strong, strange.

    I went back out in the light of the next day.
    The weather’d turned and a thaw’d begun.
    The pond was still half-frozen,
    But the lonesome, solid goose was gone.
    And where he’d stood, my hope had sprung.
  • Storm Fronts and Jeremiads

    Storm Fronts and Jeremiads

    A few months ago, I began noticing extreme cloud changes. I’m sure they’ve always been there, but for the first thirty-five years of my life, I failed to see them.

    In the past year, though, I’ve seen and taken pictures of a few of these storm fronts.

    These abrupt changes strike me as beautiful. They also remind me of The Book of Jeremiah in The Old Testament.

    For most of the book, Jeremiah prophecies doom and gloom for Israel. He explains the terrible agonies the nation is experiencing because they’ve turned their backs on God.

    As I read the book, I kept thinking, “this is terrible. Is it ever gonna end?” Every page seemed to weigh a thousand pounds. I’d flip through and see that I had many pages to go.

    Then, around verse 16 of chapter 30, there is an abrupt change. Chapters 27-29 are entirely prose. Chapter 30 is almost entirely poetry.

    For the first half of chapter 30, the Lord recounts the pains of Israel.

    All your lovers have forgotten you;

    they care nothing for you;

    for I have dealt you the blow of an enemy,

    the punishment of a merciless foe,

    because your guilt is great,

    because your sins are flagrant.

    Why do you cry out over your hurt?

    Your pain is incurable.

    Because your guilt is great,

    because your sins are flagrant,

    I have done these things to you.

    (Jeremiah 30:14-15)

    But then, in verses 16 and 17, it all changes. It looks, to me, exactly like those sudden, drastic changes in the cloud formations.

    Therefore all who devour you shall be devoured,

    and all your foes, every one of them, shall go into captivity;

    those who plunder you shall be plundered,

    and all who prey on you I will make a prey.

    For I will restore health to you,

    and your wounds I will heal,

    declares the Lord,

    because they have called you an outcast:

    ‘It is Zion, for whom no one cares!’

    (Jeremiah 30:16-17)

    Thus says the Lord:

    Behold, I will restore the fortunes of the tents of Jacob

    and have compassion on his dwellings;

    the city shall be rebuilt on its mound,

    and the palace shall stand where it used to be.

    Out of them shall come songs of thanksgiving,

    and the voices of those who celebrate.

    I will multiply them, and they shall not be few;

    I will make them honored, and they shall not be small.

    (Jeremiah 30:18-19)

    Unfortunately, Jeremiah darkens again in the remaining chapters. The ending is not a happy one. Too, in the pictures of the cloud changes, the storm is as often coming as it is going. But those small moments in between, when everything is changing, leave us with awe. They remind us that, through clear skies and storms, something wonderful is happening.