A collection of poetry, prayers and odd items from Fiat Lux
Friday, February 4, 2011
February 2011 poems
The Book of Ruth and Naomi By Marge Piercy
When you pick up the Tanakh and read the Book of Ruth, it is a shock how little it resembles memory. It's concerned with inheritance, lands, men's names, how women must wiggle and wobble to live.
Yet women have kept it dear for the beloved elder who cherished Ruth, more friend than daughter. Daughters leave. Ruth brought even the baby she made with Boaz home as a gift.
Where you go, I will go too, your people shall be my people, I will be a Jew for you, for what is yours I will love as I love you, oh Naomi my mother, my sister, my heart.
Show me a woman who does not dream a double, heart's twin, a sister of the mind in whose ear she can whisper, whose hair she can braid as her life twists its pleasure and pain and shame. Show me a woman who does not hide in the locket of bone that deep eye beam of fiercely gentle love she had once from mother, daughter, sister; once like a warm moon that radiance aligned the tides of her blood into potent order.
At the season of first fruits, we recall two travellers, co-conspirators, scavengers making do with leftovers and mill ends, whose friendship was stronger than fear, stronger than hunger, who walked together, the road of shards, hands joined.
The Unknown God
by Alice Meynell
ONE of the crowd went up, And knelt before the Paten and the Cup, Received the Lord, returned in peace, and prayed Close to my side; then in my heart I said:
‘O Christ, in this man’s life— This stranger who is Thine—in all his strife, All his felicity, his good and ill, In the assaulted stronghold of his will,
‘I do confess Thee here, Alive within this life; I know Thee near Within this lonely conscience, closed away Within this brother’s solitary day.
‘Christ in his unknown heart, His intellect unknown—this love, this art, This battle and this peace, this destiny That I shall never know, look upon me!
From that secret place And from that separate dwelling, give me grace.
The Love of Morning
By Denise Levertov It is hard sometimes to drag ourselves back to the love of morning after we've lain in the dark crying out O God, save us from the horror . . . .
God has saved the world one more day even with its leaden burden of human evil; we wake to birdsong. And if sunlight's gossamer lifts in its net the weight of all that is solid, our hearts, too, are lifted, swung like laughing infants;
but on gray mornings, all incident - our own hunger, the dear tasks of continuance, the footsteps before us in the earth's beloved dust, leading the way - all, is hard to love again for we resent a summons that disregards our sloth, and this calls us, calls us.
This blog is an archive of poems, prayers and other items from my main blogFiat Lux. Please let me invite you to join us at Fiat Lux by clicking HERE or by clicking the lighthouse illustration below.
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