Mary Oliver
******
Love Song: The Reproduction of Mothering (1)
from The Making of the Mother: Portraits Marcia Aldrich
******
Peach Catie Rosemurgy
The head, the mouth, the fruit, the
eating.
The pit, the teeth, the branch, the
fall.The wet, the swollen, the light, the seeing.
The picking, the washing, the cutting, the quartering.
The sweet, the having.
The juice. The holding it in your
hands
beautiful and then ruined. The
forms of devouring. The remaining empty.What’s inside.
The excitement of the definite article.
What’s inside
one thing is analogous to what’s
inside another.The ceremonial names
of what is done to them. What is
unknown requires a new way of cutting.
What we’re left with.
How we make an object ours, make it
disappear.
How we become the object and are
food.How we are delicious and dead at the center in so many ways.
How that is wrong and it is stillness, moon-like at the core.
How what we are is what reflects off it. How we are light produced earlier
by other things.
******
A poem is an empty suitcase that you can never quit
emptying. Kay Ryan
******
"For What Binds
Us"
Jane Hirschfield
There are names for what binds us:
strong forces, weak forces.
Look around, you can see them:
the skin that forms in a half-empty cup,
nails rusting into the places they join,
joints dovetailed on their own weight.
The way things stay so solidly
wherever they've been set down --
and gravity, scientists say, is weak.
And see how the flesh grows back
across a wound, with a great vehemence,
more strong
than the simple, untested surface before.
There's a name for it on horses,
when it comes back darker and raised: proud flesh,
as all flesh,
is proud of its wounds, wears them
as honors given out after battle,
small triumphs pinned to the chest --
And when two people have loved each other
see how it is like a
scar between their bodies,
stronger, darker, and proud;
how the black cord makes of them a single fabric
that nothing can tear or mend.
There are names for what binds us:
strong forces, weak forces.
Look around, you can see them:
the skin that forms in a half-empty cup,
nails rusting into the places they join,
joints dovetailed on their own weight.
The way things stay so solidly
wherever they've been set down --
and gravity, scientists say, is weak.
And see how the flesh grows back
across a wound, with a great vehemence,
more strong
than the simple, untested surface before.
There's a name for it on horses,
when it comes back darker and raised: proud flesh,
as all flesh,
is proud of its wounds, wears them
as honors given out after battle,
small triumphs pinned to the chest --
And when two people have loved each other
see how it is like a
scar between their bodies,
stronger, darker, and proud;
how the black cord makes of them a single fabric
that nothing can tear or mend.
******
The true
contemplative is not the one who prepares his mind for a particular message
that he wants or expects to hear, but who remains empty because he knows that
he can never expect or anticipate the word that will transform his darkness
into light. He does not even anticipate a special kind of transformation. He
does not demand light instead of darkness. He waits on the Word of God in
silence, and when is “answered,” it is not so much by a word that bursts into
his silence. It is by his silence itself suddenly, inexplicably revealing
itself to him as a word of great power, full of the voice of God.
Thomas Merton, Contemplative Prayer, p. 112-3
2 comments:
I love these themed blog entries. Love all the connections....
I'm so glad, Carol. Sometimes I feel like I'm throwing all this out there into the abyss. Glad something has landed somewhere.....
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