A Thoughtful Poem from Historian, William Irwin Thompson

Am I more than I “know I am”? Historian, and former MIT professor, William Irwin Thompson thinks so and makes a powerful argument in his poem, “Four In the Morning.”  Thompson was just coming on the scene in history studies in the early 1980’s when I was doing graduate work in history at the University of Arkansas.  Thompson was an avant-garde historian, thinking out of the box and even “out side of the box that the box was in.”  The following poem demonstrates this “global” perspective on life, a view that could also be described as cosmic.

FOUR IN THE MORNING

The universe is crawling with unseen life:
angels and djinn and spiritual guides.
Like the excess in a stagnant pond,
this abscess of the Absolute
is obscenely corpulent
in every nook and cranny,
armpit and crotch
of the Great Mother
of dark energy and dark matter
we do not see anymore
than the germs in our guts see us,
because they are not germs
but neurons of a larger brain
in which an I is only an organ,
or rather an artificially imposed
membrane drawn arbitrarily
amid a mass of interactive
molecular gates with ions
coming and going as they please
without a thought of me.
Savages knew this once
and could feel it like an itch
beyond the reach of scratch.
Christian missionaries called it animism
and tried to beat it out of them,
bringing brassieres to contain breasts,
and bibles to contain minds,
but nights when I cannot sleep,
I wake at something the clock
marks as three or four,
with my mind teeming and itching
with alien cosmologies
of journeys through other galaxies
and I wake, knowing more than I am.

“Four in the Morning” comes from his blog, “Meta-psychosis” and appears to be a descent into a maelstrom which could be taken for lunacy, other than for his ability to wrap a perspective around disparate verbal imagery and tie it all together to make his point; what would otherwise be closely akin to psychotic word-salad is a thoughtful, poetic look at the intricate complexity of the beautiful world we live in.  Thompson’s study of history, and the liberal arts, and science, allowed him to present this beautiful poetic essay about the process of life itself in which our individual life is seen as but a component dimension of the pulsating energy field that is life itself.  He makes a persuasive argument that we are “more” than we think that we are, driven by something akin to what Shakespeare had in mind when he noted, “There is a divinity that doeth shape our ends, rough hew them how we may.”

2 thoughts on “A Thoughtful Poem from Historian, William Irwin Thompson

  1. Unknown's avatarAnonymous

    Have you ever tried the discipline of centering prayer. For reasons that the spirit knows before I was even fully awake in the morning I would have a sense of a calling to “take back my soul”. I resonated with that in some unclear way and did not know how to do this. Over a few weeks of this sense I was in agreement with that call but how. Remarkably I had signed up to go to a one day retreat on Our Mystical Roots hoping there would be some connection for me with this calling. During the course of the day I was introduced to centering prayer and have been doing this discipline for 20 min. twice a day. Morning and then late p.m. The Divine knows us well, calls to us and gives us aids to become more steadied and at peace. We can really feel like we are losing our souls in the chaos of these days but through the discipline of this particular prayer I have even experienced joy and I think that I am taking back my soul.
    I wish the same for you and your readers.

    Peace,
    Bonnie
    Canada

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    1. literarylew's avatarliterarylew Post author

      Always delightful to hear from you Bonnie! Yes, Centering Prayer is a timely suggestion for me and is so relevant to the disintegration issue present in the Thompson poem. The disintegration, or “chaos”, I think is a dimension of the human soul. But, meditation…or meditative prayer…is a means of finding an anchor to avoid being consumed by this force of destruction. Makes me think of Paul’s notion about Jesus, “By Him, all things cohere….”

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