Sweetness - Stephen Dunn
Just when it
has seemed I couldn’t bear
one more
friend
waking with a
tumor, one more maniac
with a perfect
reason, often a sweetness
has come
and changed
nothing in the world
except the way
I stumbled through it,
for a while
lost
in the
ignorance of loving
someone or
something, the world shrunk
to mouth-size,
hand-size, and
never seeming small.
I acknowledge
there is no sweetness
that doesn’t
leave a stain,
no sweetness
that’s ever sufficiently sweet…
Tonight a
friend called to say his lover
was killed in
a car
he was
driving. His voice was low
and guttural,
he repeated what he needed
to repeat, and
I repeated
the one or two
words we have for such grief
until we were
speaking only in tones.
Often a
sweetness comes
as if on loan,
stays just long enough
to make sense
of what it means to be alive,
then returns
to its dark
source. As for
me, I don’t care
where it’s
been, or what bitter road
it’s traveled
to come so far, to taste so good.
to come so far, to taste so good.
All
poetry is amazing, there's no doubt about that. But there's something about
this poem that makes it stand out from the rest, at least for me. This human
life, with all its unreliability and impermanence, is fraught with tragedy. All
the bad, dark, evil things in the world seem to cast a shadow that's too wide
for the good things to beat back. What chance does happiness have when it's
surrounded by death and hatred and jealousy? But maybe we look for happiness in
the wrong places. Maybe happiness isn't accompanied by a cavalcade of blaring
trumpets and flared banners to announce its arrival. Maybe it chooses the quiet
and unsuspecting moments in our lives to make itself known but because they're
not the obvious ones, we tend to miss them. I think it's this silent happiness
that steals up on us that Stephen Dunn has referred to as sweetness in his
poem.
It's
the feeling you get when you're on the last leg of a road trip, sipping
makeshift tea made from a hot-water thermos and teabags, listening to your
parents talking about what life used to be like back in the day and the sound
of your sisters sleeping, when you've been driving for four straight hours and
all you want to do is just drive into your neighborhood, and see your porch
light on. It's the feeling you get when you've been up all night talking to a
friend and as you both get sleepier and sleepier, you start talking in tones
rather than in words but you can understand each other anyway, and perhaps
better than you've ever been able to. Or when you're up on the roof alone,
watching the sunset and the crows cawing all around you and the occasional bat
fluttering past and thinking that you've survived through all the bullshit
that's happened, and you still have got your entire life to live. If you grab
hold of this happiness...that sweetness...at the right moment, it's
exhilarating, and all the dark, depressing parts of life seem trivial and silly
in comparison. I guess the saying is true:
"Happiness
is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will elude you. But if
you turn your attention to other things, it will come and sit softly on your
shoulder."
~
Thoreau
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