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Captain Craig

Chapter 14: ERASMUS
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About This Book

A collection of poems beginning with a long narrative portrait of an aging, proud man who drifts into poverty and prompts reflections on dignity, failure, and small mercies. The remaining pieces move among other solitary or strained figures in a small-town milieu, exploring memory, social judgment, domestic life, and the passage of time. Plain diction, subtle irony, and careful dramatic detail shape meditations on compassion, human frailty, and the moral weight of ordinary moments.

 

ERASMUS

When he protested, not too solemnly,
That for a world’s achieving maintenance
The crust of overdone divinity
Lacked aliment, they called it recreance;
And when he chose through his own glass to scan
Sick Europe, and reduced, unyieldingly,
The monk within the cassock to the man
Within the monk, they called it heresy.
And when he made so perilously bold
As to be scattered forth in black and white,
Good fathers looked askance at him and rolled
Their inward eyes in anguish and affright;
There were some of them did shake at what was told,
And they shook best who knew that he was right.