Dear little Granny, let me take your hand
And thank you for the gift you gave to me--
That you could send your babies to this land
And yet remain yourself across the sea
For two long years before you also came.
There is a look of sadness in your eyes
And poignant loneliness too deep to name,
Yet back of this--I marvel in surprise--
I see a glorious faith, calm and serene,
A look of reverent courage and of peace
That you had sent them here to fields all green
And fertile with God's righteous, rich increase.
Your children's children honor you ... They stand
Holding your torch of faith in this choice land.
Showing posts with label Touch of Wings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Touch of Wings. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
The Fragrance of Lillies Lingered
There among the crosses
The great, gaunt commoner
Knelt in grief and supplication.
God, in his shadow, touched him saying,
"My son, arise and behold!"
Where once the crosses rose
Was a field of lilies;
Walking through them, the living forms
Of the crucified, One among them
Like unto God who said,
"Behold, my brothers, not in vain,
Oh, not in vain we died,
But to bring undying beauty."
God spoke again,
"My son, have patience--
Look to far horizons
To see the glory of America,
And beyond, the glory of the world."
There among the crosses
God and the commoner were gone
But the fragrance lingered.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Would There Be Room
If Christ should come to Bethlehem tonight
And ask for lodging at the blazing inn,
Would there be room? Or would He know the plight
That came to Mary? Would a stable's din
Fall on His ears? His bed be fragrant hay?
Would He be mocked and spat upon and die?
Would some new Pilate wash his hands and say,
"I find no fault, but you may crucify"?
Or have the mills of time in grinding made
His own to know; to hear again His voice--
"Let not your hearts be troubled or afraid"?
If Christ should come tonight, would they, through choice,
Inscribe their banner--wave it high, unfurled--
"Jesus of Nazareth, ruler of the world!"?
Thursday, November 24, 2011
His Were Patient Feet
The feet of Joseph, walking mile on mile,
Were willing feet. The donkey following
His lead avoided every stone: He bore
The unborn King.
Mary, who saw their feet were tiring, knew
She must reach Bethlehem to bear her Son.
She smiled at Joseph, knowing he too dreamed
Of the Little One.
The Babe's first cry dispelled his weariness
When resting in a stable sweet with hay.
He thought of the waiting cradle as he knelt
Where the Infant lay.
Oh, his were patient feet, not hesitant:
When an angel bade, they crossed the desert sand
Fleeing to Egypt. Wearied, Joseph touched
A little hand.
And was renewed--Time passed. Returning home,
The Little One would often coax to walk
Beside him; leave small footprints by his own.
The Wee Lad's talk
Awoke his father-love: What joy to work
Together in his shop ... until He grew!
All wisely would he guide those little feet,
For he knew ... He knew!
Monday, November 21, 2011
Shine Softly Stars
Shine softly little lamps of night
That God hung in the sky;
O cooling breezes, gently blow
And hum a lullaby;
For on the road from Bethlehem
The radiant Mary smiles.
Her baby's tiny fingers cling
And joy illumes the miles--
Remembering the strange new star,
Once more the angels sing;
Again the Magi bring her babe
Their costly offering.
While silent Joseph standing near
Bows reverently his head,
Again the lowly shepherds kneel
Beside the manger-bed--
The little donkey's feet are sure.
Led by his master's hand,
Does he not bear a sacred load
Across the desert sand?
The baby sleeps in Mary's arms;
Her eyes, with wonder, shine.
A kingly little son is hers
To love--His sire divine.
Moon-Mother, veil the face of night
With moonbeams, sheer and thin;
Shut out the harsh world from her heart
And keep but joy therein.
O radiant Mary, dream your dreams
While little night lamps glow;
The road that leads to Calvary
Tonight, you need not know.
Friday, November 18, 2011
Illumed by a Star
Since I am the pilot--
My ship built of days--
I sail for an islet
Beyond the earth-ways,
Its lighthouse a Temple
Illumed by a star--
The bells in its steeple
Call "Peace!" from afar.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
A New Star Rises
Old carols--
Peace ... good will ...
Are worn threadbare.
The words:
Angels, shepherds, Magi,
Stable and moving Star
Obsolete.
My gifts:
A new pin-up--my girl in her wedding gown;
(She married the fellow at home.)
A new rifle.
The cry of a child dying--
(Not of the Babe, new-born)
The footfalls of communism in the distance--
Not receding--
And two years in the army.
I am only a soldier--
But a new star rises in Nevada,
Holy and Chill.
Labels:
Christmas,
Materialism,
Misplaced values,
Nevada,
Sin,
Touch of Wings
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Let Your Black Tears Flow
Weep black tears
for the fallen hero,
for the uninhabited mountain from which he fell.
Weep, for he lies at the foot of the mountain
wizened to a dwarf with his spine curved
like the willow.
Weep, and pull the sword
from his bleached heart.
Let your black tears flow
till the sword corrodes with rust
and the soaring Eagle sky-writes PEACE
with the ashes of the war-stallion.
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Leave Me This Last Shred of Hope
Let us leave the answer
For the historian to record
We who have not prophet-eyes
To read the future
Cry with a terrible wailing
The senselessness of the last warring struggle.
Backward in history
Like-wailings were heard,
Yet time built a monument to freedom
On the graves of its martyrs--
The cross of Calvary
Transposed a song of death
Into a timeless symphony of life.
So may the fields of crosses
Blossom into the beauty
Of freedom for all men.
Leave me this last shred of home
For my son was killed in Korea.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Young God
From the burning stubble of civilization
Beneath the mourning Heavens
Will arise a young god
Nurtured by the queer people, the dreamers.
He will revive the dying Eagle;
Empty the witches brew of hate;
Refill its casks with wine of ruth;
Build altars from the fragments of dead dreams
And light thereon the tapers of forgiveness.
Then will the thunderous echoes
Of the hooves of the stallion war
Die in the distance;
And again shall be heard
The triumphant screen of the Eagle
With never the clang of chains.
O queer dreamers of destiny,
Nurture well the young god
Whose name is love.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
I Heard a New Bird Singing
(To Lilith Lorraine)
On the rim of chaos
my ear was cupped
to hear hoofbeats on a country road
but I heard a new bird singing.
Piercing as a naked scimitar
cleaving the housewife warblings of the wrens
came its new song.
Its tongued lightning,
its sundering bass,
deep with the thunder of the gods,
shook my Jerico-walls of apathy
until they crumbled--
Through my trembling skeleton
I saw the world.
I heard a new bird singing,
merging its song with the Eagle's scream
until in exultant crescendo
it mingled with the shriek of shattered patterns.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Friday, October 28, 2011
Portrait
We are a pale generation
With willow-withe spines
And anemic blood
Needing the transfusion of courage.
We are the "God's in His Heaven" people
Who linger in the miraged oasis
Rather than ride the imperiled
With the black-cowled horseman of doom to ask:
"What has become of the hot,
Red blood of your sires
With the unbending straightness of pines
Who answered to the challenge-call
Of the conquering lion
Rather than to the soft purring
Of the Machiavellian?"
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Consider the Pine
Consider the pine, O man:
Century-wise on the mountain
Licked by the red tongue of war,
Seeing patterns in chaos,
Feeling the trembling of Atlas
And reading the prophecy of annihilation,
Waving its banners of immortality--
Constancy through change, its message
To a dying universe.
Consider the pine O man:
Its feet deep in virile loam,
Its forehead touching Heaven,
Its innumerable fingers
Tapping the air for sustenance,
Glorifying the Master-Mind of beauty.
Consider the pine, and let its challenge song
Drown out the siren croon of apathy
That would lull you to sleep
Lounging on its cushions of complacency
Until your ship of days enters the harbor of doom
From which there is no returning.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
To Fulfill a Dream
We who have heard the singing of the stars,
The symphony from lilting robin-throats,
The laughter of the hills devoid of scars,
Now hear the laugh of avarice that gloats.
The atavistic mirth that chills the soul
From mouths of grasping men with claws uncurled
To still the pulse of love--make earth unwhole,
Drowns out the Master's lyric in the world.
Yet as we listen to the ruthless tongues
We see ethereal candles brightly gleam,
And strive to climb the higher on the rungs
Reaching to Heaven to fulfill a dream.
We toil to heal the gaping greed-made scars--
We who have heard the singing of the stars.
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Josephs in World Egypt
When Man returns to leavens of the plow
And walks with joy upon the fruited plain,
There will be no grief-burdened hearts as now
For God is found in singing fields of grain.
The Josephs in the Egypt of the world
Will ever keep the flag of peace unfurled.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
To You Who Wear White Cloaks
Though we were given a darker chrysalis
To cloak our spirits, hide the white within,
No mandate said there need be an abyss
Unbridged between our souls, for our dark skin
Was given us by that same Father who
Cloaked you in white. Though you are fair of face,
Can you not see a brother smiling through
The covering He gave to every race?
Our hearts, with yours can hear Him when He calls;
Can feel the pulse-beat of all brother-men.
Come, let us batter down the blinding walls
Of race and creed and hate, for only then
Can we petition God to bid war cease,
And climb and reach, at last, the Mount of Peace.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
In the Eternal Silence
I dug a grave in the depths of my soul
Then straightway forgot the place--
No paths lead to it. With none to condole,
I buried with silent grace
The wrongs I had suffered; then on my road
My companion was Peace, who lightened my load.
Monday, October 10, 2011
Miracle of the Gulls
Singing, they blazed a highway to the West--
The Mormon pioneers. The desert sod
They conquered, even to the mountain's crest,
To build a great imperium to God.
"Come, come, ye Saints," they sang, "nor labor fear.
We seek the place where God would have us dwell.
Though hard to you this journey may appear,
With joy, gird up your loins, for all is well."
A reverent people asking but to be
Allowed, in peace, to worship Him they loved--
Their right within a kingdom of the free--
Were driven by the lash of slander; shoved
From their ancestral homes with rams of hate:
To coax the dormant life from desert sands;
To keep their shrine of faith inviolate;
Release an Eden in primeval land,
Where high above the ravens of despair
White wings of hope would bid them build their dream;
Where, clarion-clear, through elemental air
Tolerance would echo in the eagle's scream.
Day after day the covered wagons rolled
Across the startled prairies. Light hearts sang
With violins in gladness. Mourning told
Of graves beside the trail ... Yet ever rang
The carillons of truth. A retinue
Of angels listened to their muted song,
"And should we die before our journey's through,
All, all is well." Hearts quailed to hear the long-
Drawn howl of hungry wolves ... A prophet's death,
Mob violence, were left behind; ahead,
Cathedral mountains and the challenging breath
From desert-lungs. When their great leader said,
Viewing the valley-land, "This is the place!"
All eagerly they plowed and sowed and reaped;
Laid plans for Templed cities. The embrace
Of toil was sweet, and life in earth's womb leaped
To greening beauty: Thirsty acres drank
From cool canals and "blossomed as the rose."
Then came black wings of doom, and laughter sank
In depths of horror: Hordes of cricket-foes
Came swarming from the mountains till the sun
Was veiled in darkness by them flying, creeping.
And field on field was barrened, overrun
By the marauders. Wives and mothers, weeping,
Fathers and children fought with fire and flail
Unceasingly, while sending fervent prayer,
Pleading for Heaven to save. To no avail
They toiled, then waited: On expectant air,
There came the ominous sound of rushing wind--
Great whirring wings alighted like a cloud.
The gaunt, worn pioneers, grief-disciplined,
Saw death descending swiftly in a shroud:
Rising from waters of the lake came gulls,
Great white-winged birds that brought but added fears.
Could nothing save now but God's miracles?
The cup of joy became a cup of tears.
Then, "All is well!" rang out the victory cry,
"God has delivered us! The crops are saved!
Great joyful wings!" Their paeans reached the sky--
"Praise God for mercy prodigally laved!"
The gulls would gorge, cast up, then gorge again.
Exhausted toilers stood in awe to see
The feasting birds eject the crickets, then
Refill their craws ... Their dark Gethsemane
Was lily-beautified.
As strong men knelt
And wept like children, with new tenderness,
Mothers held babies to their breasts, and felt
Anointing hands of angels in caress.
Within God's shadow, weary hearts (grown old)
Leaped with the pulse of April. Pioneers,
Young as tomorrow, in a rescued wold
Sang, "All is well! Dispersed are all our fears.
Why should we mourn or think our lot is hard?"
For God's sure fingers held His world in place.
Their hearts retuned unto love's harpsichord,
They joyed within the peace of His embrace.
Today, beside a timeless monument--
Great silent wings--their children's children tell
The sacred tale of how the gulls were sent,
And sing the stirring anthem, "All is well!"
Thursday, October 6, 2011
With Never a Backward Glance
When Adam and Eve
Stood outside of Eden's closed gates,
The gold of sunrise flecked the barren sands,
Gilded the great Joshua-arms of the desert
And glorified the far horizon.
In the distance--backward to Eden--
Came the singing of seraphim,
While from the waste land came the scream of the lion,
A challenge-call to conquer.
Eve spoke, "It is better thus:
We are not fallen mortals but rising gods
Knowing good from evil.
The Father smiled approval as He said, 'Depart.'
I am not afraid."
Adam answered her challenge,
"Wisely we disobeyed. In our innocence
We knew not we were naked until awakened
By the alchemy of the forbidden fruit.
Now we will multiply and have dominion over the earth
Even as God commanded.
In deserts of despair there will be oases of hope.
Guided by the torches of avatars from other spheres,
We shall make all earth an Eden."
Not guilelessness with pale, passionless joy was beckoning
But virile, purposeful toil holding a banner emblazoned "Eternal Godship."
The glory of Eden paled to insignificance.
Hand in hand, Adam and Eve walked away from the closed gates
With never a backward glance.
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