DIVINER
Nobody can claim with certainty that a dowsing rod,
carved from a hazel bush and carried by a diviner
who holds it tightly with both hands with the point
twisting upwards, will twitch downwards and quiver towards
the stone slab when passed over mineral deposits deep down
in the rock. Nobody, hand on heart, can say that it is impossible
for a diviner who walks cautiously through the forest
over heather and stony soil to feel that there is iron down
there along a fault line formed two million years
ago. I am no diviner when standing here at Gruvebakken,
which Tobias Kuper pointed out after having searched for ore
here in the 17th century. But I choose to believe that people
exist who with eye and hand can sense minute changes in nature
and the seasons. Like vigilant animals along pathways they will sense
with a rod that forebodes dangers lurking in covetous hearts.
I would refer you to Seamus Heaney's poem 'The Diviner' as analysed here. Also to a poem recently published on the blog on a similar theme by the Dutch poet Ida Gerhardt here.
No comments:
Post a Comment