In my writing
this week about the God of movement and transformation and transfiguration, one
of my favorite T.S. Eliot lines has been illuminated.
Believe me.
This. is. ground. breaking.
These words are a part of me. They flow involuntarily from my lips,
like curse words and Help-me-Jesuses from the mouths of the shocked and
endangered.
My favorite phrase from all of Eliot’s poetry (and that's saying something) has been transformed.
“And so the darkness shall be the light
And the stillness the dancing.”
I noticed a new word the other day.
The darkness
SHALL be the light.
Shall—like,
not yet.
Not yet.
That's not how I pictured it. With Eliot’s
poetic prowess, his omission of the second “shall be” in the phrase “The
stillness the dancing,” stillness and dancing became one in my mind. The words
interchangeable in the syntax; the images interchangeable in my mind.
The phrase
evokes a sense of darkness = light. Stillness = dancing.
But that’s
not what Eliot says.
Darkness
BECOMES light.
Stillness
BECOMES dancing.
As Ann
Voskamps puts it in One Thousand Gifts, they are transfigured.
“Darkness
transfigures into light, bad transfigures into good, grief transfigures into
grace, empty transfigures into full.”
Darkness
transfigures into light. Stillness transfigures into dancing.
Darkness ---> Light
Bad ---> Good
Grief ---> Grace
Empty ---> Full
Stillness ---> Dancing
Eliot’s not
calling us to pretend that we see things we don’t or to imagine that our motionless
bodies are boogie-ing. But to anticipate. To be patient.
Because “the
darkness SHALL be the light and the stillness the dancing.”
And this,
this is comforting.
I love the mash-up between Eliot and Voskamps! They went perfectly together!
ReplyDeleteI seem to do the same thing in my mind (equating things, like you did in your post). Thanks for pointing out the minute word that makes all the difference!
I've been loving the mash-up as well!
DeleteI've literally uttered this phrase thousands of times in the last couple of years and never noticed the SHALL. I'm happy to share it with you.