Tuesday 25 January 2011

A Timbered Choir

A collection of Sabbath poems by Wendell Berry, worthy of reading first thing in the quiet of the morning, they still the soul to listen. 


I go among trees and sit still.
All my stirring becomes quiet
around me like circles on water.
My tasks lie in their places
where I left them, asleep like cattle.


~Stanza I of the First Poem. 


Feeding young Elliana oatmeal. Not because she couldn't do it herself; some sort of communion was going on there.

Wednesday 19 January 2011

how can this be?


He has two brothers and sister,
but not one in the same house.
A first mom who's known
by her first name, a picture
to him who knows another,
a wholly unrelated person
as Mama; his daily bread
comes from her hand, from the body
of she who bore him not, but
gives her every day to holding
the baby boy, a little man child.
He knows no home outside of love
a mutual need that brought him here--
he who needed care, and
those who needed to care, and
those he left behind did care enough
to release him, to be loved--
a stranger thing was never known
among men.  He who suffers the way
of the unknown, yields his own
to those plans of God, whose sons
come not by flesh and blood
but by water and word, the vow:
"I love you; you are mine."


Monday 17 January 2011

the thankfulness Sabbath


On days like this one,
sixty degrees, mare's tail cloud
in a blue sky reflected silver
in the broad expanse of river below,
we sit, the king and I, observing.
The small son crawling behind
our chairs which are minimalist thrones
metal and new plastic, durable
deck furniture placidly waiting
empty until the tourists come.
We, the rulers of a minute kingdom,
watch our offspring on hands and knees
safe between concrete wall and railing,
and he watches us, playing peek-a-boo
and racing away at turtle-speed 
that we might pursue and overtake,
capture him, throw him in the air
reclaim the liberty we offered in joy
of watching, to see what he would do.
We sit, the king and I, under blue sky,
viewing the silver tidal river
on the deck of the new museum,
coffee drained from the white cups,
and we rise from our rest, to walk again.