Homelessness

 

Mantra:      loneliness of mystery

 

Source:       Jessica Powers’ “There is a Homelessness

 

There is a homelessness, never to be clearly defined.

It is more than having no place of one’s own,

          no bed or chair.

It is more than walking in a waste of wind,

or gleaning the crumbs where someone else has dined,

or taking a coin for food or clothes to wear.

The loan of things and the denial of things are possible to bear.

 

It is more, even than homelessness of heart,

of being always a stranger at love’s side,

of creeping up to a door only to start

at a shrill voice and to plunge back to the wide

dark of one’s own obscurity and hide.

 

it is the homelessness of the soul in the body sown;

it is the loneliness of mystery:

of seeing oneself a leaf, inexplicable and unknown,

cast from an unimaginable tree;

of knowing one’s life to be a brief wind blown

down a fissure of time in the rock of eternity.

The artist weeps to wrench this grief from stone;

he pushes his hands through the tangled vines of music,

but he cannot set it free.

 

It is the pain of the mystic suddenly thrown

back from the noon of God to the night of his own humanity.

It is his grief; it is the grief of all those praying

in finite words to an Infinity

Whom, if they saw, they could not comprehend;

          Whom they cannot see.