Gregory Orr grew up in the Hudson Valley, where traumatic childhood incidents forged writing as an act of survival. The author of numerous poetry collections, including The Last Love Poem I Will Ever Write, he is a master of short, lyric free verse. He wrote the memoir The Blessing and three books of essays, including Poetry as Survival. A professor of English at the University of Virginia since 1975, Orr lives in Charlottesville with his wife and daughters.

Photograph by Trisha Orr.

Ode to Nothing

by Gregory Orr
Sorrow makes children of us all—
the wisest knows nothing.

—Ralph Waldo Emerson


1.

When scientists tell us
Atoms are mostly
Made of nothing,
They are speaking
As priests charged
With a deep mystery:


How nothing holds
The universe together;
How nothing
Is the secret force
At the heart of it all.


In the old days, theologians
Asked: Is there an angel
Of nothing
Among the heavenly hosts?
The answer is No.


Nor does an angel
Of nothing dwell in hell.


Nothing is the only
Angel and cannot
Rise or fall.


All of us surround
The angel of nothing,
Whizzing our winged
Elliptical circuits of worship
Like electrons
Orbiting a nucleus.
With our restless fly-buzz
We create
The material world.
People on couch
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