Dana Gioia

Official site for poet and critic Dana Gioia

  • News & Interviews
  • Bio
  • Poems
  • Books
    • Poetry
    • Criticism
    • Anthologies
    • Libretti and Recordings
    • Translations
  • Videos
  • Essays
    • On Writers
    • Literary California
    • On Poetry
    • Music & Film
    • Memoir
    • Writing & Reading
  • Opera & Music
You are here: Home / Poems / Pity the Beautiful / The Angel with the Broken Wing

The Angel with the Broken Wing

I am the Angel with the Broken Wing,
The one large statue in this quiet room.
The staff finds me too fierce, and so they shut
Faith’s ardor in this air-conditioned tomb.

The docents praise my elegant design
Above the chatter of the gallery.
Perhaps I am a masterpiece of sorts—
The perfect emblem of futility.

Mendoza carved me for a country church.
(His name’s forgotten now except by me.)
I stood beside a gilded altar where
The hopeless offered God their misery.

I heard their women whispering at my feet—
Prayers for the lost, the dying, and the dead.
Their candles stretched my shadows up the wall,
And I became the hunger that they fed.

I broke my left wing in the Revolution
(Even a saint can savor irony)
When troops were sent to vandalize the chapel.
They hit me once—almost apologetically.

For even the godless feel something in a church,
A twinge of hope, fear? Who knows what it is?
A trembling unaccounted by their laws,
An ancient memory they can’t dismiss.

There are so many things I must tell God!
The howling of the damned can’t reach so high.
But I stand like a dead thing nailed to a perch,
A crippled saint against a painted sky.

Filed Under: Pity the Beautiful, Poems