Saturday, September 23, 2017

OUR LADY OF THE ASCENSION


OUR LADY OF THE ASCENSION*

Fold your love like hands around the moment,
Keep it for conference with your heart, that exit
caught on clocks, by dutiful scribes recorded
less truly than in archives of your soul.

Turn back from His going, be His still-remaining,
lift the familiar latch on cottage door ...
discover His voice in corners, hear His footsteps
run down the porches of your thoughts! No Powers

however hoarse with joy, no Dominations
limp with adoration guess what whispers
of: "Mother, look!" and: "Mother, hurry!"
glance off the cottage walls in shafts of glory.

How shall your heart keep swinging longer, Mary?
Quickly, quickly, take the sturdy needle
before your soul crowds through your flesh - the needle
and stout black thread will save you! Take the sandal

Peter left for mending. After that,
the time is short, with bread to bake for John.

Mother M Francis PCC
Cord. August 1958
Used with permission

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* The Ascension of Our Lord Jesus Christ is referred to here. The poem is a reference to the loneliness Mary must have suffered after returning from seeing  
her Son ascend into heaven forty days after His Resurrection.

PSALM FOR THE MOTHER OF GOD



PSALM FOR THE MOTHER OF GOD

Sleeved and skirted in sun, informed with Spirit,
invade the moments of our history,
Mary with all your terrible bright battalions.

You are less cadence than sinew of our songs,
girl whose smiles run down our joys, O woman
whose fiat blames our sleep of sorrow, Mary,

loop our feet retreating with your glances -
ropes of lilacs stouter than any chain!
Virgin of perspective, focus us

fast on your Son, and catch our straying glances,
little foxes*, in your trap of hands -
less cadence be than sinew of our songs.

Mother M Francis PCC
Spirit. 1963-64. Used with permission

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* Song of Songs 11:15

OUR LADY OF SCIENCE


OUR LADY OF SCIENCE

Our Lady is a geometric form,
a being perfect in the subtle mind;
Our Lady is a prism glass designed
to break the pattern swiftly to the Norm.
Our Lady is a lulling and a storm,
a portent of a vista yet unmined;
Our Lady is all elements combined,
a crucible of heart upstirred and warm.

Here where to one divine event the pace
of time is set; here where the cradled seed
is promise of the life, the final lace
of man to God - this is the prayer, the creed -
Lady of Science, of atom, of cell,
O come, to shape the place for Christ to dwell.

Sister Maura SSND
Where once the wild Arbutus grew. 1945
Used with permission

OUR LADY OF SONG


OUR LADY OF SONG

My soul doth magnify the little sound
of coming song: the shuttle of the leaves
before the rain; the thunder of the sheaves
of winter clouds so silently unbound
before the snow; the whir of wings that mound
a nest; the soft, sharp breath that childhood weaves
upon a gift; the stir of ghostly greaves
of angel's armour guarding us around.

Unbar the cloister of your song; the larks
that Francis* knew wheel agile, sunward, high;
From psaltery of the heart unswing white sparks
Of beauty, bird and star flung to the sky.
Set free your voice above the lonely throng,
The sound you bring is peace - Our Lady's song.

Sister Maura SSND
Where once the wild Arbutus grew. 1945.
Used with permission

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*St Francis of Assisi, the saint who was known for his love for nature, birds and animals.

OUR LADY OF WISDOM


OUR LADY OF WISDOM
Our Lady holds all Wisdom unconfined
within her veil, her arms, her heart - a weave
of love about herself. No nights bereave
the Light she bears. Who are of spirit signed,
to these she comes to share the Essence undefined
and undefinable. To shy young Eve
she brings the great desire that will leave
 a lovely, humble halo on the mind.

Our Lady walks in wisdom in this place,
as young a girl as these; Our Lady knows
what subtleties great Aquin's* words may trace,
and, knowing, lifts the rod, and bears the Rose
announcing gifts of splendour, all His, His,
Who Father bides, and Godhead, He Who is.

Sister Maura SSND
Where once the wild Arbutus grew. 1945
Used with permission


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* St Thomas Aquinas (1226-1274), the Dominican priest, theologian, philosopher, writer and saint

OUR LADY OF THE REFUGEES


OUR LADY OF THE REFUGEES
Mother who knew
what hardship shakes
a woman bundling clothes
and putting by her wheaten cakes;
Mother who urged the donkey
(making happy riot
on the straggling stones)
urged the beast to be more quiet:
Mother who heard the Child
whimper beneath the thin blue shawl,
our aching prayers cry out to thee,
Mother, pray for them all.

A thousand Bethlehems
mask dark tonight;
the eyes of little friendly homes
have lost their light;
pathetic heaps of poor, dear things
are laid aside; a small bird sang
where a latched door swings.
Mother, whose sad Egyptian flight
preceded all of these
guide them in faith beneath familiar stars,
Our Lady of the Refugees.

Sister Maura SSND
Marian Library Collection
Used with permission