Catrin Welz Stein |
The Thread
Something
is very gently,
invisibly,
silently,
pulling
at me-a thread
or net
of threads
finer
than cobweb and as
elastic.
I haven't tried
the
strength of it. No barbed hook
pierced
and tore me. Was it
not
long ago this thread
began
to draw me? Or
way
back? Was I
born
with its knot about my
neck, a
bridle? Not fear
but a
stirring
of
wonder makes me
catch
my breath when I feel
the tug
of it when I thought
it had
loosened itself and gone.
Denise Levertov
“A
stirring of wonder…” This poem might sound
like diaphanous sweet-talk, if it weren’t for “Was I born with its knot about
my neck, a bridle?” Levertov's poem asks questions we recognize from somewhere. The “silent,
gentle tugging”, doesn’t that seem familiar? “ I haven’t tried the strength of
it”. That line intrigues me. Spider silk is one of the strongest threads known.
So what is this thread? What is it
that we can forget sometimes, and yet remains, and in a shocking moment can
stop us in our tracks and drag us back, or around? What is this longing, this
sense of something calling, something waiting to be known? Unlike "The Way It Is" by William Stafford, in which the thread is something we hold to and follow, in this poem, the thread holds us, draws us. It's that same turn-things-inside-out theme that I love so much and look for everywhere.
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