'The White Crucifixion' ~ Marc Chagall
I didn't think there were many poems written about Good Friday, well, ones that weren't overtly religious in tone. Then I came across this one, by Denise Levertov, talking about how Jesus is represented by painters through the ages, mainly not represented as human, as falteringly human - what she does here in this poem:
Salvator Mundi: Via Crucis - Denise Levertov
Maybe He looked indeed
much as Rembrandt envisioned Him
in those small heads that seem in fact
portraits of more than a model.
A dark, still young, very intelligent face,
a soul-mirror gaze of deep understanding, unjudging.
That face, in extremis, would have clenched its teeth
in a grimace not shown in even the great crucifixions.
The burden of humanness (I begin to see) exacted from Him
that He taste also the humiliation of dread,
cold sweat of wanting to let the whole thing go,
like any mortal hero out of his depth,
like anyone who has taken herself back.
The painters, even the greatest, don’t show how,
in the midnight Garden,
or staggering uphill under the weight of the Cross,
He went through with even the human longing
to simply cease, to not be.
Not torture of body,
not the hideous betrayals humans commit
nor the faithless weakness of friends, and surely
not the anticipation of death (not then, in agony’s grip)
was Incarnation’s heaviest weight,
but this sickened desire to renege,
to step back from what He, Who was God,
had promised Himself, and had entered
time and flesh to enact.
Sublime acceptance, to be absolute, had to have welled
up from those depths where purpose
drifted for mortal moments.
Interesting perspective...and I love the painting you chose to put at the top. Marc Chagall is one of my favourite artists :)
ReplyDeleteI haven't been around much lately, but I'm back now. Hope you're having a lovely Easter weekend xxx
Thanks Cheryl! Oh I adore Chagall, especially the Paris paintings! Such a magical artist!
DeleteHappy Easter to you too! :)