Sunday, August 2, 2020

SALUTE (Before the statue of Our Lady of Peace in St Mary Major)



SALUTE
(Before the statue of Our Lady of Peace in St Mary Major[1])

The little lad brushed past me like a dart
thrown by some seraph lurking in the gloom
pushing the opal dusk apart
at arch and chiselled tomb;
where down the tall nave’s pillared road
bright Hymettus marble glowed
this little one
With sweet face bronzed by an Italian sun
came to a crisp halt where
a white madonna waited wistfully
for some small prayer,
or still word spoken to her Child
Who held an olive branch, and smiled.

With ritual of medieval knight
taut at attention, drawn to his full height,
this cherubic recruit
raised a small hand in swift salute
as it were meet
that he salute a lady in the street,
so now this Lady in the dusk-dimmed nave
beneath the multi-shadowed architrave.

But as he turned to go I saw him start
as at some little thought that bruised his heart –
had he heard what the blue winds said
of bitter steel wings overhead? –
Oblivious of discipline
this military mannikin
in one swift bound
climbed to her feet,
and heedless of the worshipper’s critique
leaned close across the rhythms of her gown
and laid a kiss upon her curved, cool cheek,
then scrambled down
and fleet
fled through the pillars to the Roman street.

As when a tired tree against a hill
is rinsed with sudden music and grows still,
so stood I spirit-shaken, pondering
the lonely wisdom of this thing:
not only in lip-rubric told with care
is power of prayer;
there is a luminous leaven
of silence more articulate to bless –
there are some things that must be torn from heaven
by tears and tenderness.
Sister M Thérèse SDS

Give Joan a Sword.  MacMillan. 1945. Used with permission





[1] St Mary Major is one of the four patriarchal basilicas or churches of Rome.  Built in 352 AD, it was dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary in 435 AD.  Cf Page 48.

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