Christian Wiman: Poet Speaks on Faith and Reason
Wednesday, May 25, 2011 at 10:07AM | by
Otter My friend David pointed this out to me. It's beautifully written, and well worth a read.
The thing is full of money-quotes, but just to give you taste:
IN TRUTH, though, what I crave at this point in my life is to speak more clearly what it is I believe. It is not that I am tired of poetic truth, or that I feel it to be somehow weaker or less true than reason. The opposite is the case. Inspiration is to thought what grace is to faith: intrusive, transcendent, transformative, but also evanescent and, all too often, anomalous. A poem can leave its maker at once more deeply seized by existence and, in a profound way, alienated from it, for as the act of making ends, as the world that seemed to overbrim its boundaries becomes, once more, merely the world, it can be very difficult to retain any faith at all in that original moment of inspiration. The memory of that momentary blaze, in fact, and the art that issued from it, can become a kind of reproach to the fireless life in which you find yourself most of the time. Grace is no different.
Factual Language,
Faith,
Poetic Language,
Poetry in
Imagination,
Language,
Poetry,
Religion,
Spirituality 

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