A Cappella SATB divisi setting of Wendell Berry's beloved poem
The Peace of Wild Things - SATB
The Composition
Wendell Berry’s poem took special meaning to me the summer of 2008 while living at Holden Village, a remote community buried deep in the Cascade Mountains of Washington state. “Home” included grandiose mountain peaks, tame bucks, deep glacier lakes, big black bears, and an eclectic gathering of people. There, I found that living amidst ‘the peace of wild things’ was not an escape from reality, but rather a powerful reminder of the interconnectedness of our world – a notion that our shared commonalities are far stronger than our inevitable divides.
The Poem
The works of Wendell Berry (b. 1934) stand as an autonomous voice in American literature today. His many novels, essays, and poetry collections interweave nostalgia for a lost harmony amidst humanity and the earth we inhabit. Poems, including The Peace of Wild Things, interplay pressing environmental concerns against a broader cultural anxiety paining for relief – a yearning for both inner and outer peace. In much of his writing, one can vicariously experience the alternative lifestyle that he’s chosen; to this day, he lives with sparse technology upon the land that he farms in Kentucky. This poem is used with his gracious permission – a letter scribed on a typewriter and delivered the old fashioned way, via the postal service.

