I never wasby Donald H. Baker H'57 |
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I never was much of a Christian even in Sunday school (the brothers Robertson praised Jesus for us all)
but now the old gray granite Episcopal church on Monument Road where the town's last elms
shine glassily as ice in the wintry sunrise rings its silver carillon so cheerily and well
I blink, dismayed, my blithe irreverence awry, think of the new black Bible with my name stamped in gold.
the old upright piano and my father singing, the stained-glass lamb and dove, the lilies at the altar,
and, before the bread and grape juice, the Reverend Van Horn's vague, insistent prayer for penetential dawn,
and, idling at the traffic light, I praise not Jesus but the nagging symbols cast before me here
under the icy elms, where the old stone church lifts its squat tower so doggedly to God,
shakes me so severely with a sudden iron bell, that I, a disbeliever, almost become again
the pale, distracted boy who bided and believed in the vast incarnate miracle of all that was, is, and shall be ever.
Donald W. Baker H'57
from The Readiness: Poems from the Cape
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