Monday, January 11, 2021
The peace of wild things (by Wendell Berry) Video
The poet Wendell Berry reflects on the sublime peace of escaping into
wilderness
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.
The US writer, farmer
and environmental activist Wendell Berry is a quintessential voice of the rural
American South, with his poetry – very much in the tradition of Henry David
Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson – often reflecting on the sublime and spiritual
facets of nature. In one of his best-known poems, ‘The Peace of Wild Things’
(2012), a narrator, despairing at the state of the human world, finds relief in
a journey into nature, being among ‘wild things/who do not tax their lives with
forethought/of grief’. Part of an animated poetry series from the radio and
podcast programme On Being, this adaptation
features Berry himself narrating in a rich, rustic baritone, and lush
watercolour imagery from the UK animator Katy Wang and the UK illustrator
Charlotte Ager.
Directors: Katy Wang, Charlotte Ager
Writer and Narrator: Wendell Berry
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