Epistle
When the sky darkens with alabaster and mahogany——
Storm and woodsmoke, and the swirling gyres of
unpredictability reign;
When the granite laws are brutally enacted;
When the judges receive the verdict from on high, and, as
of old, close their ears to the truth;
When the soup is meagre, the fruit of the vine bitter and
premature;
And the burden of the cardinal virtues weighs heavily upon
your shoulders—
When the balm of distance recedes before your steps at
nightfall;
When injurious deeds do not trouble the holders of the iron
keys;
When the sunset blinds the eyes with blood and vengeance;
And the will of the tyrant is unrelenting—your trials
descending upon your shoulders with the force of a storm that
rides upon the barbed, jagged hills:
In those hours, my brothers, my sisters, I know you have
grown weary—
I know that even ancient words do not provide solace for your
rocky path,
But take heart in the pale light that flashes over the dark
mountains,
Steady your hearing to an inner music: wait with impatience——
wait with mercy.
Copyright © 2024 by Ellen Hinsey. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 25, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
“In 1919, W. B. Yeats wrote ‘The Second Coming’ with its prophecy of ‘the blood-dimmed tide’—a text that anticipated the disasters of the twentieth century. We have arrived at a moment when many sense that we are again on the threshold of something ominous, already, in fact, tragically unfolding in parts of the world. In the face of this, is despair our only option? How can we overcome traps that trigger further divisions? Can poetry help us to reach across those divides and affirm the power of Love, which nevertheless still possesses the force to change the world?”
—Ellen Hinsey