“Nostalgia,”
writes scholar Tony Esolen, is not mere “misty-eyed adulation of an imagined
time that never existed,” nor “reactionary sentimentalism.” It is “the ache to
turn back home,” a mirror of the soul’s yearning for our eternal home, heaven. It
is the longing to break free of our postmodern alienation and set our steps
back on the journey to meaning and belonging. And it is the theme that courses
through Wanderings
in Place, the latest collection of poetry from David Horowitz Freedom Center president
Michael Finch.
I reviewed Finding
Home, Finch’s first collection of poems, for FrontPage Mag here in 2015. Like
that book, Wanderings in Place is a very personal volume, with poems anchored
in Finch’s vivid memories of loves and landscapes and longing. But when art is personal
and true and heartfelt, it rises above the personal and resonates with our
common humanity, and that is the case here. Also like Finding
Home,
the new book has a very American character, grounded as it is in our unique
spirit of freedom and in
the lands,
forests, fields, rivers,
from Great Lakes
to widening expanse, a land blessed
of waves of amber
grain and purple hues, rising up
against the great
Rockies across desert to the mighty sea.
“I have spent my
life searching for America,” Finch wrote in the introduction to Finding
Home,
“for what we have lost. And always searching for home. We are a rootless
people, a rootless nation, it is a great strength as we always strive and push
out and go beyond all limits. But who can deny the void that it leaves?” In more
than three dozen short poems in his new book, Finch helps lead us out of that
void into the welcoming panoramas of an American home we are in danger of
losing.
What is it we are
losing, exactly, and why? In poems with titles such as “American Man in Final,”
“Thoughts of Freedom Dying,” “Oh, America,” and “Statues Fall,” Finch laments:
Our might,
our freedom, our
strength, our land our culture
faded into memory,
traveled faraway, gone forever.
And:
This moment of a
nation, a people who lived free,
lived in liberty so
unique, so true, so brief.
Praise be to God
for all of it – even if fleeting, fading, and gone.
It was, in our
time, glorious.
He lays the blame for
our decline on the false “love of our own created gods” and our failure to stand
firm against an internal enemy:
We didn’t hold
fast, lost faith, and now,
slipped and
vanishing before our eyes,
in a generation’s
blink taken, given, freedom
whisking past like
whispers of ghosts.
A progressive
rise, revolt of elites, opened borders
sovereignty spent,
all for profit and power, and nothing left.
Land of gutted
factories, torn families, wasted lives
shattered dreams,
vacant, blown-through memories.
Finch isn’t
without hope or fighting spirit, however. In “To the White City,” he calls for the
glorious city now known as Istanbul, “a city from the ancients, glory of
Athens, Rome, and Jerusalem / All awoken in one, one soaring, climbing, great
rise of faith,” a city “bequeathed by Constantine for our Lord,” to emerge as a
symbol of Christian preeminence once again amid the “desert vastness East”:
Awaken! Constantinople,
ascend from our dreams and take your place.
Take us home to
the Lord’s embrace on this heavenly day.
Similarly, in “Statues
Fall” he stands against the historical revisionism of anti-American radicals here
at home obsessed, like ISIS, with destroying the monuments of our past:
Blessed by our
troubled and glorious history.
Cherish American
heroes through time, flawed and all.
Don’t heed these tales
of America’s misery.
Stand tall, show
courage, and hear our founders’ call.
But ultimately, Finch
knows that peace and rest can be found only in our true home. In “A Letter to
God,” he writes,
It can’t come here in
this place,
among men, not in this
world,
but only by the beauty
of your grace…
“The seeker that
you made in all of us,” he continues, yearns for final transcendence:
I
close my eyes and dream of a path
through golden fields,
running streams
dripping sunlight into
diamond falls glitter
cool breezes down
mountain slopes fall,
from tree-lined high above,
above the tallest peak,
the moon’s crest and
early starlight fall
into endless space and
fold into welcoming arms.
Home to you I seek,
and to this path I strive,
stay true to you, I
plead.
Lovelorn poems
like “A Summer Afternoon,” “A Love For the Heavens,” “Of Wanting,” and “A Love
Letter,” as well as poems like “Alongside the River,” “All Folds Inward,” and “Off
Tomah Way” celebrating grand American vistas, round out this collection by a
man fast becoming the preeminent contemporary poet of the American
heartland:
Gentle rolling farms,
an easy land,
beautiful,
bountiful as any on earth.
Cared for and
protected by families
for generations on
down.
Hearths and homesteads,
small, tucked, tight;
valleys, fence
rows, backroads roll on.
The late, great philosopher
Roger Scruton argued that beauty is a path that leads us home. Michael Finch’s Wanderings
in Place and his earlier work Finding Home take us there.
His themes and imagery, his humility and sense of wonder, his appreciation of a
natural order infused with the supernatural, speak to and give voice to all those
Americans who yearn for beauty in our era of ugliness, and who yearn for home
in an alienated world.
From FrontPage Mag, 1/17/20