SPRING THAW
Oozing between banks of snow
Winters recession
Like diseased gums drawn aside
Old teeth drop like icicles
IMAGINE: NO POSSESSIONS
and had a long talk with his
Rolls Royce.
Saint John of the Cross once
said
it matters not whether a
sparrow is bound
by a cord or by a slender
thread--
he is bound anyway.
I sit here in the house I
supposedly own,
and imagine the
possessionlessnesss of a Saint.
But the real bondage is that
which flows from within,
to the six spheres of sense.
It is not the fault of the
air
that it cannot be grasped by
the clenched fist.
Every road has to begin
somewhere.
Every destination was once
only a Thought.
Let us realize at the outset
that there is not even Self
to own,
and that a little leaven
will one day leaven the whole
loaf.
DEAF DUMB AND BLIND
One Sabbath morning as the
church
Grew boisterous with a joyful
noise,
Two parents entered as I
watched,
Led hand in hand behind a boy
Who could not see or speak or
hear,
Yet led them to the rail and
stood
Between the two, to worship
there
The Father of the just and
good.
Behind their backs the
hypocrites,
So eager to be seen and
heard,
Saw nothing but the masks
that fit
Their roles, and thus had
their reward.
The boy his parents’ hands
released
And raised his head in silent
prayer,
When suddenly the clamor
ceased,
As in his thoughts I seemed
to share:
“My friends had come to visit
me.
I signed with them in great
delight;
But all too soon I grew
fatigued,
For nothing that we said
seemed right.
“But now, with Thee to speak
I turn
Within my lone and silent
heart,
Where I of Thee can ever
learn,
And never dwell from grace
apart.
“But when I visit with my
friends,
I put my finest garments on
And fret to please and humor
them,
And tire when they stay too
long--
“Because my mind cannot be
free
When it is bound to others’
wills.
They share but gossip’s words
with me,
And leave me desolate and
ill.
“But O my Father, comest
Thou,
And I lift up my soul to see;
And with thy Presence in a
cloud
My heart is cheered, at rest
in Thee.
“And though I cannot speak or
hear,
And cannot view the world
outside,
I would not trade my petty
cares
For man’s or angel’s senses
five
And be without the One I
love,
Whose heart beats in the life
of all,
Yet dwells in blessed dark
above
This world where mind and
senses crawl.”
Thus prayed the child, in words
quite lost
Upon the self-adoring crowd,
Which, thronging to the golden
cross,
THE WEEKDAY SONG
The hunchback hobbled
homeward
At twilight one fine day,
And spied a band of fairies
A-dancing in his way
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
“Come dance with us, O
hunchback!”
They shouted from their ring.
“Come sing the Song of
Weekdays
Permitted us to sing
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.”
The hunchback joined their
circle,
And hand in hand he danced,
The fairy queen his partner,
Exalting in a trance
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
The fays were so delighted
The hunchback danced so well,
They took the hump that
stooped him
And blessed him with a spell
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Though crooked he had joined
in,
He parted from them straight;
And no one recognized him
When he came home so late
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
The night was young; the
fairies
Commenced again their reel,
All in the merry moonlight,
In all their joy revealed
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Along then came a tailor,
A bold and handsome man
Who stepped up to the
dancers,
And pushed into their band
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
He gave the queen a sly wink,
And rudely wrapped his arm
About her fairy shoulders,
And chanted with the charm
Of Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
And so this foolish person
Cavorted with the fays,
Until he added Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday
To Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Then everything got ugly.
The fairies held him down
And clapped the hump upon him
The hunchback had disowned
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Now you who hear this story
It may be, are forewarned:
The Humble are made perfect,
The Vain become deformed,
On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
From an incident recorded in
“The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries,” by W. Y. Evans-Wentz
ANOTHER AGE
When the white kitchen clock stopped
my mother was going to throw it out,
but since I wanted it for a toy
she let me take it outside to play.
It had a long black cord I held
by the plug and dragged behind me,
trailing with the gleam of the morning sun on its face
as I roamed through the green dewy clover.
QUAKER BLOSSOMS
I
A Friend was Richard Galloway,
But Samuel, his great grandson,
Built Tulip Hill on the slave trade—
Estate so proudly Georgian.
Nearby, upon the burial ground,
George Fox proclaimed the Inner Light
To those whose shriveled corpses now
Lie vacant where his words took flight.
II
Ten thousand years or more ago,
The first Algonquin settled here
Beside the sprawling Bay we know,
With glaciers melting on their heels.
They signed a pact with colonists,
Beneath a spreading Tulip Tree—
Today where Saint John’s College lists
The World’s Great Books for us to read.
III
In childhood I explored the hill
My father built our home upon;
Where Tulip Poplars’ flowers filled
Their boughs and dropped across the lawn.
How sweet it was to contemplate
Their petals cupped and yellow-green,
With red and orange glowing faint,
Like passions fading from past scenes!
IV
Employed to search out, sort and track
Old records at your next request,
I browsed an Archives’ moldered stacks
Of rags and wood to pages pressed.
Without direction, like sere leaves
That tumble through autumnal fields,
I turned life’s pages uselessly—
What harvest could such idling yield?
V
From what I read between the lines
Of Quaker Records, I will quote
The whispers of the wind that winds
Its circuits through old Poplar groves:
What does it mean? A child squats low,
And lifts one fallen flower to view
Its pigments in the dew drops’ glow,
Reflecting vistas strange and new.
SOME SECRET GARDEN
To us the winter’s end is
signified
By Hylas croaking from the
budding trees,
Their song like sleigh bells,
after having climbed
From hibernation underneath
the leaves
And broken branches toward
the sunny heights,
Their vocal sacs swelled up
with evening air.
Their chorus chants of such
romantic nights
As you and I remember, when
our care
Was for some secret garden
and embrace,
Where what we took to be our
hearts and minds
Succumbed to Nature and pursued
a trace
Of fleeting passion as we
pulsed through time.
We dreamed it in the ice of
our repose,
Our sleigh bells frozen
underneath the snow.
SPRING THAW Muddy frozen foot steps Oozing between banks of snow Winters recession Like diseased gums drawn aside Old teeth dr...