Habitation of Wonder

Habitation of Wonder

by Abigail Carroll
Habitation of Wonder

Habitation of Wonder

by Abigail Carroll

Hardcover

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Overview

Habitation of Wonder is an offering of poems that travels the intersection of the natural landscape and the landscape of spirit. Here, the moon is a ""white comma / in the breath of space."" Crocuses are ""ephemeral prophets, first of the sun's spring projects."" The ocean is ""a vast / perpetual sacrifice on the altar / of the shell-glittering shore."" The collection opens with ""Genesis,"" a reimagining of the creation story with song as the divine instrument of creation. Five themed sections flow from ""Genesis"" like a musical thread, investigating the material elements from which we originate and in which we take shelter, as well as the gifts of language and faith, which make us more than merely ""a constellation of salts."" In its own way, each poem invites the reader to ""tenant beauty""--as well as to tenant uncertainty. When beauty and uncertainty collide, they spark wonder. As these poems suggest, wonder is simply another name for the world in which we live--and the world that lives in us. ""'In this life,' Abigail Carroll writes, 'we could use a little more/beauty.' Fortunately, Carroll has gifted us that beauty with this spectacular volume of poetry. In poems whose sounds audaciously zip and leap about the page, Carroll finds her creed in both nature--mountains, weeds, elephants, the 'liturgies/of the waves'--and in language itself, locating in the letter m and in commas proof of God's handiwork and the world's sanctity. These swirling poems exemplify the lyric as song, and in poetry's ability to restore the reader's wonder in 'the imminence/of winter, the free enterprise of grace.'"" --Anna Silver, Author of From Nothing and Second Bloom Abigail Carroll lives and writes in Vermont. She is author of A Gathering of Larks: Letters to Saint Francis from a Modern-Day Pilgrim (2017) and Three Squares: The Invention of the American Meal (2013).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781532630279
Publisher: Cascade Books
Publication date: 01/18/2018
Series: Poiema Poetry , #26
Pages: 128
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.44(d)

About the Author

Abigail Carroll lives and writes in Vermont. She is author of A Gathering of Larks: Letters to Saint Francis from a Modern-Day Pilgrim (2017) and Three Squares: The Invention of the American Meal (2013).

Table of Contents

Genesis (I) 1

Water

Canticle (I) 5

The Calling 7

Make Me River 9

The Way A Fish 11

Learning To Pray 12

Make Me Chalice 14

Thalassic 15

M Is for Mary 17

Heron 19

Vespers 21

Wood(S)

May 25

Habitation of Wonder 27

Make Me Sheet Moss 29

Maine 30

That I Might Dwell 31

Hallowed Be 32

Concession 34

Make Me Willow 35

The Glassed World 36

Make Me Cello 38

March, Vermont 39

Matins 41

Air

Flyers and Singers 45

Kingdom of the Air 47

Make Me Red-tailed Hawk 48

In Gratitude (I) 49

Genesis (II) 51

Enterprise 52

Cumulus 54

A Short History of Light 56

Ode to Onions 58

Swinging 61

Word

Orchard 67

In Gratitude (II) 68

Retreat 71

Possession 73

Ode to the Passive Voice 75

Infinitive 76

In Gratitude (III) 78

What Men Die For Lack Of 80

Ministry of Snow 81

In Objection 83

Grammar Lesson 85

Spring Forward 87

In Gratitude (IV) 89

Creed

Toward A Winter Retreat Packing List 93

Reading Hopkins at the Auto Repair 96

Before the Shape-Note Sing 97

Canticle (II) 99

Make Me Plow Blade 100

Genesis (III) 101

Offering 103

Psalm 105

How to Prepare for the Second Coming 106

Inheritance 108

Prayer 111

Benediction 113

Creed 115

Acknowledgements 117

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“‘In this life,’ Abigail Carroll writes, ‘we could use a little more/beauty.’ Fortunately, Carroll has gifted us that beauty with this spectacular volume of poetry. In poems whose sounds audaciously zip and leap about the page, Carroll finds her creed in both nature—mountains, weeds, elephants, the ‘liturgies/of the waves’—and in language itself, locating in the letter m and in commas proof of God’s handiwork and the world’s sanctity. These swirling poems exemplify the lyric as song, and in poetry’s ability to restore the reader’s wonder in ‘the imminence/of winter, the free enterprise of grace.’”

—Anna Silver, Author of From Nothing and Second Bloom

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