By Doug Sangster
First Poem:
I once knew a man whose preferred
mode of communication with God was the monologue
His transmitter worked but
his receiver was broken, so each day he stood and opened his crowded mouth
and let the words file out, until the turnstile bearings were smoking
No one ever told him that
silence is golden, until a friend from a mountain put his finger tip to
his lips and gently shushed him
Then a mother from a
desert or a brother from an island, I cannot remember which, mustered him
up and taught him to stand deaf and dumb, silent as a mannequin
And that is where I saw
him last, at rest, quiet as a tomb, one foot on a rung, attentive to the Spirit
praying within him
Second Poem:
It is an eye-opening
pleasure to measure time
Not by the slow moving
hands of a clock
But by the loss of earthly
illusions
Mistaken certainties that
dissipate and fade to gray wafting moths that rise and disappear into the
dark
Above the diaphanous flame
of God Who burns white-hot within the heart.
--
Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema
to the Union!
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