Friday, February 26, 2021

Gloria



The whole world is full of glory:

Here is the glory of created things,
the earth and the sky,
the sun and the moon,
the stars and the vast expanses:

Here is the fellowship
with all that was created,
the air and the wind,
cloud and rain,
sunshine and snow:

All life like the bubbling of a flowing river
and the dark currents of the depths of the sea
is full of glory.

The white waves of the breath of peace
on the mountains,
and the light striding
in the distances of the sea.

The explosion of the dawn wood-pigeons
and the fie of the sunset doves,
sheep and cattle at their grazing,
the joy of countless creeping things
as they blossom,
spider and ant
of nimble disposition
proclaim the riches of goodness.

The curse of life is to err.

The meadows and the yellow corn,
the slopes of the grape clusters,
the sweetness of the apple tree's fruit:

The provision on the tray
of the warm comely seasons
a part of each hard beginning:

The discretion that insists on respect
for all our partners —
all the creatures of our day
and our life in the world for ever.

Every land, every language,
became bread and wine:

Every labour,
railway stations,
bus stops
at the beginning of journeys,
every aviation:

Every art
under its own fig tree —
the vision of a man and a maid.
Lest treating
the misunderstanding between man
and his world, becomes
a giving way to meaninglessness:

And perchance we shall see the dancing
in the halls of the atoms
and the meddling with their temperament
as an art of the soul.

The coal in the bowels of the vale,
the clear water of the valleys
and the energy of machines' atmosphere:

The secret of fresh airs —
old meanings a cold well:

The delicate breeze
like the sun on the seagull's belly
awakening wings

All beneficiaries
(unless we spit the original terror of sin on it all)
resounded the Gloria of praise.

--Euros Bowen (1904-1988), Welsh poet and Anglican priest, translated from the Welsh by Cynthia and Saunders Davies.

Psalm 139:1-11

1 LORD, you have searched me out and known me; *
you know my sitting down and my rising up;
you discern my thoughts from afar.
2 You trace my journeys and my resting-places *
and are acquainted with all my ways.
3 Indeed, there is not a word on my lips, *
but you, O LORD, know it altogether.
4 You press upon me behind and before *
and lay your hand upon me.
5 Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; *
it is so high that I cannot attain to it.
6 Where can I go then from your Spirit? *
where can I flee from your presence?
7 If I climb up to heaven, you are there; *
if I make the grave my bed, you are there also.
8 If I take the wings of the morning *
and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea,
9 Even there your hand will lead me *
and your right hand hold me fast.
10 If I say, "Surely the darkness will cover me, *
and the light around me turn to night,"
11 Darkness is not dark to you;
the night is as bright as the day; *
darkness and light to you are both alike.

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

The One



Green, blue, yellow and red –
God is down in the swamps and marshes
Sensational as April and almost incred-
ible the flowering of our catharsis.
A humble scene in a backward place
Where no one important ever looked
The raving flowers looked up in the face
Of the One and the Endless, the Mind that has baulked
The profoundest of mortals. A primrose, a violet,
A violent wild iris – but mostly anonymous performers
Yet an important occasion as the Muse at her toilet
Prepared to inform the local farmers
That beautiful, beautiful, beautiful God
Was breathing His love by a cut-away bog.

-- Patrick Kavanagh (1904-1967) Irish poet and novelist, from Collected Poems

Click here to hear this poem read by Padraig O'Tuama from NPR's On Being's website.

Thursday, February 18, 2021

20 Holy Habits for Lent-- and Beyond

1. Read the “Good Book”—every day for at least 15 minutes.

2. Treat yourself to 15 minutes of silence each day. Listen to yourself breathe, or lay your fingers upon your pulse at your wrist, and give thanks.

3. Take a walk each day, and notice your surroundings.

4. Create—and use-- an Anglican Rosary with beads.

5. Create a prayer shelf or corner somewhere in your house, with a candle, prayerbook, rosary, cairn, or images to meditate upon.

6. Read the daily meditation in Forward Day by Day at noontime each day.

7. Make a list of 40 people or places for which you are grateful, and pray for them.

8. Give away 40 items you no longer need.

9. Keep an image journal each day of Lent, and draw or include an image or photograph that speaks to you. Include a daily quote or poem from your reading, if you like.

10. Send a card to someone you haven’t seen in a while—you can even make your own. Tell them how much they mean to you.

11. Visit an art museum online, and learn about a new artist each day.

12. Perform a random act of kindness each day.

13. Compliment someone each day—and mean it.

14. Think of something you feel embarrassed, grieved, regret, or ashamed about in the past. Write it down. Offer it up to God. Then set the paper on fire (safely) and offer yourself forgiveness and release.

15. Think of someone you have been holding a grudge against or have a long-standing issue with. Release yourself from carrying this burden any longer.

16. Blow some bubbles or enjoy some other simple pleasure from childhood.

17. Really listen to a loved one talk to you each day, without distraction.

18. Paint a river rock with an uplifting image or word, and leave it for someone to find.

19. Order some seeds of native plants good for pollinators, and begin to start them so that you can plant them in the spring.

20. Memorize a short psalm or psalm fragment to say to yourself as you prepare for sleep each night. Good ones include: 20:1-4; 23, 31:1-5; 46;1-5; 67; 71:1-3;84:1-5; 91:1-4;95:1-7; 100; 104:24-28; 117; 121; 123; 131; 133-134;139:1-7.

Friday, February 12, 2021

He Said



“Your garden at dusk
Is the soul of love
Blurred in its beauty
And softly caressing;
I, gently daring
This sweetest confessing,
Say your garden at dusk
Is your soul. My Love.”

-- Anne Spencer (1882-1975), African American poet, civil rights leader, librarian, and gardener.

Monday, February 8, 2021

Lines to a Nasturtium (A Lover Muses)



Flame-flower, Day-torch, Mauna Loa,
I saw a daring bee, today, pause, and soar,
Into your flaming heart;
Then did I hear crisp, crinkled laughter
As the furies after tore him apart?
A bird, next, small and humming,
Looked into your startled depths and fled . . .
Surely, some dread sight, and dafter
Than human eyes as mine can see,
Set the stricken air waves drumming
In his flight.

Day-torch, Flame-flower, cool-hot Beauty,
I cannot see, I cannot hear your flutey;
Voice lure your loving swain,
But I know one other to whom you are in beauty
Born in vain:
Hair like the setting sun,
Her eyes a rising star,
Motions gracious as reeds by Babylon, bar
All your competing;
Hands like, how like, brown lilies sweet,
Cloth of gold were fair enough to touch her feet.
Ah, how the sense reels at my repeating,
As once in her fire-lit heart I felt the furies
Beating, beating.

-- Anne Spencer (1882-1975), African American poet of the Harlem Renaissance, librarian, civil rights activist, and gardener.

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

if mama/ could see



if mama
could see
she would see
lucy sprawling
limbs of lucy
decorating the
backs of chairs
lucy hair
holding the mirrors up
that reflect odd
aspects of lucy.

if mama
could hear
she would hear
lucysong rolled in the
corners like lint
exotic webs of lucysighs
long lucy spiders explaining
to obscure gods.

if mama
could talk
she would talk
good girl
good girl
good girl

clean up your room.


-- Lucille Clifton, 1936-2010, African American poet, children's book author, Maryland's Poet Laureate 1974-1985, and professor, from Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir, 1969-1980.

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Pestilence



Six thousand men strong, the army poured toward the sea.
Slavery’s wide wings gliding overhead
spread an infecting shadow as, step by step,
they swept like a battalion of ravenous ants,
advancing through the landscape and leaving a stench
drenched in sweat, shit, vomit, terror, and smoke.
The gentlefolk of every village burned,
borne by the black tide, shuffled in the slavers’ wake,
awake for the first time to a larger fate,
indeterminate but nasty: on the world stage
in an age when a workforce could be bought and sold.
Golden, the flow of human life down the green slopes.
Hopes shriveled in the glare of the distant bright
whitewashed castle’s acrid glitter in sunlight.


--Marilyn Nelson,  (1946- ), African American poet and translator, Poet Laureate of Connecticut, from Faster Than Light, 2012


Image: Sculpture by Edmonia Lewis (1844-1907), "Forever Free," 1867

Translation



We trekked into a far country,
My friend and I.
Our deeper content was never spoken,
But each knew all the other said.
He told me how calm his soul was laid
By the lack of anvil and strife.
“The wooing kestrel,” I said, “mutes his mating-note
To please the harmony of this sweet silence.”
And when at the day’s end
We laid tired bodies ’gainst
The loose warm sands,
And the air fleeced its particles for a coverlet;
When star after star came out
To guard their lovers in oblivion—
My soul so leapt that my evening prayer
Stole my morning song!

-- Anne Spencer (1882-1975), African American poet of the Harlem Renaissance, civil rights leader, librarian, and gardener.