The Foreword to the new book “The Wisdom of Our Ancestors: Conservative Humanism and the Western Tradition.”
Word
Word is hello, is house,
The arrival in the ride.
It is the root that grows,
The uttered oath, the bride
Beside, before the altar,
Before decisions falter.
Word is the inside-out
Of loneliness’s pillow,
The certainty of doubt,
A shimmer on a billow
At the horizon’s edge
Beyond the garden hedge.
Word is white before
Its colors can begin
To chronicle its lore.
It speaks our speaking: in
The beginning was the word,
It’s what the silence heard.
Word, in time, we break
Or give, spread or keep.
It may ring true when fake,
Taken on faith, asleep.
Adam and Eve would fault
A word for their lost gestalt.
Word is the tongue on watch
For what might crack the crust,
The thumbprint ash, the blotch
On a brow, forecast of dust.
Its breath is what engenders
Breath in the earth it renders.
It is the code of law
That conquers kings with a sword
Too fine for shock and awe.
A spaceship carries word
In a time capsule. Its nib
Is the point of Adam’s rib.
Andrew Frisardi’s most recent books, both published in 2020, are The Harvest and the Lamp and Love’s Scribe: Reading Dante in the Book of Creation.
Founded in 1957 by the great Russell Kirk, Modern Age is the forum for stimulating debate and discussion of the most important ideas of concern to conservatives of all stripes. It plays a vital role in these contentious, confusing times by applying timeless principles to the specific conditions and crises of our age—to what Kirk, in the inaugural issue, called “the great moral and social and political and economic and literary questions of the hour.”
Get the Collegiate Experience You Hunger For
Your time at college is too important to get a shallow education in which viewpoints are shut out and rigorous discussion is shut down.
Explore intellectual conservatism
Join a vibrant community of students and scholars
Defend your principles
Join the ISI community. Membership is free.
The Danger of Philosophy
In the wrong hands, it can easily lead to endless and perverse questioning of everything.
Was the Constitution a Coup?
H. W. Brands attempts to uncover the causes of the founding debates.