The Peace of Wild Things eBook with a slice of cake, a cup of coffee, and a book with a pen on a wooden table

Review: The Peace of Wild Things

For as long as people have put pen to paper, we’ve felt the powerful urge to preserve through words what we’ve lost in the tangible world. Wendell Berry’s The Peace of Wild Things captures this sentiment perfectly. His poetry oscillates gracefully between a raw acknowledgment of the chaos within both our personal lives and the larger global landscape, and a heartfelt call back to a more serene world, a world we sometimes glimpse and dearly long for.

Berry masterfully expresses the unrest we often feel, framing it beautifully in each poem. This collection is impressive, not only for its lyrical brilliance but also for how deeply it resonates with the struggles we face today. Among these pages, I found several poems that spoke profoundly to me; a few of my absolute favorites are highlighted below.

My Favorite Bits

To My Children, Fearing for Them

Terrors are to come. The earth
is poisoned with narrow lives.
I think of you. What you will

live through, or perish by, eats
at my heart. What have I done? I
need better answers than there are

to the pain of coming to see
what was done in blindness,
loving what I cannot save. Nor,

your eyes turning toward me,
can I wish your lives unmade
though the pain of them is on me.

The Dream

I dream an inescapable dream
in which I take away from the country
the bridges and roads, the fences, the strung wires,
ourselves, all we have built and dug and hollowed out,
our flocks and herds, our droves of machines.

I restore then the wide-branching trees.
I see growing over the land and shading it
the great trunks and crowns of the first forest.
I am aware of the rattling of their branches,
the lichened channels of their bark, the saps
of the ground flowing upward to their darkness.
Like the afterimage of a light that only by not
looking can be seen, I glimpse the country as it was.
All its beings belong wholly to it. They flourish
in dying as in being born. It is the life of its deaths.

I must end, always, by replacing
our beginning there, ourselves and our blades,
the flowing in of history, putting back what I took away,
trying always with the same pain of foreknowledge
to build all that we have built, but destroy nothing.

My hands weakening, I feel on all sides blindness
growing in the land on its peering bulbous stalks.
I see that my mind is not good enough.
I see that I am eager to own the earth and to own men.
I find in my mouth a bitter taste of moneym
a gaping syllable I can neither swallow nor spit out.

The Peace of Wild Things

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

The Want of Peace

All goes back to the earth,
and so I do not desire
pride of excess or power,
but the contentments made
by men who have had little:
the fisherman’s silence
receiving the river’s grace,
the gardner’s musing on rows.

I lack the peace of simple things.
I am never wholly in place.
I find no peace or grace.
We sell the world to buy fire,
our way lighted by burning men,
and that has bent my mind
and made me think of darkness
and wish for the dumb life of roots.


Author: Wendell Berry

Publication date: 22 February 2018

Number of pages: 121 pages



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