“Thy rod and thy staff” by Chantel Lavoie

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Thy rod and thy staff” by Chantel Lavoie.


Thy rod and thy staff

By Chantel Lavoie

Before the libraryโ€” shelves, desks, books

chairs we sit on and desks we sit atโ€”

was the silence of forests.

Then sawing, shouts, rumbles

hammers, pulp, ink

glue of boiled horses

to arrive at this silence.

We want the same things different:

broken-egged omelettes

sky, through a window

lights in the night.

Sometime in time

after our come down from trees

prayer sprouted or descended.

Was it cell or spirit

stirred up such stories, storied selves?

Yearning, terror, happiness

perhaps just become prayer

the way cells that donโ€™t die

turn cancerous. Prayer happens

when moods overstay their welcome.

Live sacrifices, burnt witches, enemies nailed to trees

was getting hold of the wrong end of the stick

only if someone was holding the other end.


Copyright ยฉ Chantel Lavoie

Chantel Lavoie lives in Kingston, Ontario, where she teaches at the Royal military College of Canada. Her verse has appeared in numerous journals, as well as as in her two collections of verse, Where the Terror Lies and This is about Angels, Women, and Men. Her first novel, The Boy in the Chimney, comes out early 2027.


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