Poetry Selections
Denise Levertov (1923–1997)
Flickering Mind
Lord, not you,
    it is I who am absent.
    At first
    belief was a joy I kept in secret,
    stealing alone
    into sacred places:
    a quick glance, and away—and back,
    circling.
    I have long since uttered your name
    but now
    I elude your presence.
    I stop
    to think about you, and my mind
    at once
    like a minnow darts away,
    darts
    into the shadows, into gleams that fret
    unceasing over
    the river's purling and passing.
    Not for one second
    will my self hold still, but wanders
    anywhere,
    everywhere it can turn.  Not you,
    it is I who am absent.
    You are the stream, the fish, the light,
    the pulsing shadow,
    you the unchanging presence, in whom all
    moves and changes.
    How can I focus my flickering, perceive
    at the fountain's heart
    the sapphire I know is there? 
Denise Levertov was born in England to a Welsh mother and a Russian Hasidic father. Her father, who had emigrated to the UK from Leipzig, converted to Christianity and became an Anglican priest. She moved to the United States in 1948, and in 1955 became an American citizen. By the time she died in 1997, Levertov had published nearly fifty volumes of poetry, prose, and translations. Levertov taught at Brandeis, MIT, Tufts, Stanford, and the University of Washington. It was at Stanford, where she taught for 11 years (1982–1993) in the Stegner Fellowship program, and where her papers are now housed, that Levertov converted to Christianity at the age of sixty. After moving to Seattle in 1989, she joined the Catholic Church.
For Levertov's poetry, see Paul A. Lacey and Anne Dewey (editors), with an Introduction by Eavan Boland, The Collected Poems of Denise Levertov (New York: New Directions, 2013), 1063pp.

