https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2022/05/reflections-peace-poetry-and-war-michael-finch/
The specter of nuclear war has risen again, it haunts our dreams for the first time in decades. The “end of history” was supposed to have completed that chapter, but of course that evokes our own narrow vision of the world. For those in the shadow of North Korea and for nations and peoples that fall in range of a seemingly inevitable nuclear Iran, those halcyon peaceful days of the end of history never existed. Indeed, for all of us, “peace” never lasts, never endures, we all live in the shadows of chaos, war and share the nightmares of human nature and none of us can escape the horrors of our worst selves.
Trying to make logical sense of it is an impossible task, to get into God’s mind, to understand His will and his plans is a temptation that we all have, but it only leads further into a never-ending depressing fall into the abyss. I will make sense as best I can by leaning on the writers and poets, the ideas and thoughts that speak as visions, and speak to hope. Hope is indeed a dangerous thing, but hope and faith are all that ties us, tethers us, and anchors us from that endless abyss.
We yearn for peace, but peace is allusive. Peace in our lives, peace in the world, it has never been, and never will be the norm. We are blessed to live in a nation that has known peace as we have. May we continue to be so blessed, though the horizon is darkening, and night is before us.
The yearning is strong, but again, is so allusive. William Butler Yeats wrote in his poem “Lake Isle of Innisfree” that “And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow”. Indeed. Wendall Berry sought answers in his poem, “The Peace of Wild Things” which opens “When despair grows in me”, and “I come into the peace of wild things” closing with “I rest in the grace of the world and am free.”
And peace for the world, we also yearn for it, sometimes we become blinded by its allure. Infamously British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in 1938 proclaimed we have “Peace for our Time”, yet just a year later the world would become fully engulfed in a war that would kill tens of millions.