Saturday, October 26, 2019

Earthbound Angels



To look upon what’s heavenly
Is not so rare as I once thought,
For here your mortal angels live,
Revealing what your unbound soul has wrought.
And all the love that touches me
Is more than I deserve,
And more than I can ever give
If I could even find the nerve
To follow every word
And render each desire deferred
An offering to you.
But even these I struggle mightily to do.
So, if you may extend your mercy
Another measure more,
I’ll try again to find what’s truly
Everything we’re hoping for.
I’ll watch the angels everywhere
And, grateful for their humble hearts,
Surrender all my hopes of heaven
Rewarding me for any parts
I’ve played in some redemption,
As if what little I may offer
Demands a pardoning exemption
From all the weight of all my wrongs.
Perhaps with that I’ll see
The freeing liberation of
Our souls’ equality
Existing in your overwhelming grace.
Perhaps the sins that scar each face
Will drown in your infinity.
I’m not the one to say.
I’ve known my own proclivity
To want to save the world today,
Perhaps to gain some future destiny.
The truer angels see
We’re all as one,
And none can lay a stronger claim
Regardless of the work that has been done.
It seems to me, if I am comprehending,
The only way to bring salvation
Is love that goes beyond myself completely,
Enriching what surrounds my own creation.
When all the heart is bent on that,
The sparks of heaven may appear.
My own attempts are clumsy yet.
Perhaps with time I’ll shed my cloak of fear.
It’s then the better angels of the soul
Emerge and, in the process, heal us whole.


With all of the negative news that seems to plague every day, it can be easy to forget that there are so many good people working, without much recognition, to do what they can to make this world a better place. This poem is about them - and about the example they set for us all.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Raindrop Journeys



The newly christened liquid water falls
In tiny packets sliding from the storm,
And, entering the forest’s wooded halls,
They follow many paths of varied form,
Eventually to reach absorbent soil
Where, percolating, they will feed the trees.
Some sink before the clouds have stopped their toil,
At once to join organic alchemies
Transmuting life from separate elements.
But other droplets take their time to drift
From upper canopies with ornaments
Of flower, fruit, and vine before they gift
The ground with what sustains this old-grown place.
They travel, dripping down from leaf to leaf,
And crawling round the branches as they trace
Their paths that, in the sun, remain so brief,
Evaporating to ascend the air
And start again. The droplets run their race,
But reaching first to win is not their care,
For every moment’s journey is a grace
Enlightened as the sunlight pierces through
To capture all the beauty in its space.
So, follow every branch and learn anew
How each unique direction adds to you.


This poem began as I was watching a gentle rain fall around the tree outside my window. I was struck by the fact that some droplets reach the ground very quickly, while others take more time, pausing on leaves or branches, or sliding slowly down the trunk of the tree. It made me think of how we live our lives - sometimes at a hectic, frantic pace, and sometimes more slowly and reflectively. For me, the latter is what I tend to strive for, though I don't always achieve it. 

Sunday, October 13, 2019

When Little Birds Will Sing Again


The shell has newly been discarded.
Now the baby bird’s begun
To follow where her mother goes
And leave the nest to brave the sun.
For though their home seems safe today,
Tomorrow brings uncertainty.
The mother knows they cannot stay,
And so she leads her babe away,
Traversing what the paths may be
Where other mothers brought their young
Over field and under tree
To a stream where songs are sung
Of safer lives and greater harmony.
But sometimes songs are not reality.
Upon arriving at the stream
And crossing to an unfamiliar land,
A falling hand awakes a scream
As it plucks the babe from off the sand
And traps it in a cage
Where other captive children wait,
Uncertain what the future’s page
Will soon reveal about their fate.
The mother wishes to assuage
The fear her little one is feeling,
But she is barred from coming near
And offering a bit of healing.
I cannot say, with conscience clear,
The falling hand’s in no way linked to me.
It claims to act for my security.
For where’s the danger in these baby birds
Who simply wish to sing their mothers’ words?
So I will sing my little rhyme
As clearly as I can
To call our hearts, until a time
Shall come when little birds will sing again.

This poem is about an issue that's been on my mind for a long time. It was a major news story several months ago, but I think more recent events have pushed it out of the public focus. 

Saturday, October 5, 2019

New Light's Birth



A sprinkling in the sky
Of rainbow-tinted clouds
Evaporates, like days gone by,
Behind time’s ever-growing shrouds,
And then the stars come out.
They were there the whole day long
But obscured by sun and clouds, and doubt
Of their sustained existence, wrong
Though it may truly be,
Can simmer in one’s head
When all the sky’s a pale blue sea
Where wispy white-faced islands tread.

But now the endless blackness rises,
Revealing untold depths of space
And time, for when one recognizes
A twinkling star’s familiar face,
Its light, now shining on the earth,
Has traveled long to reach this place.
Tonight, I witness new light’s birth –
A star, where none had been before.
But in truth, this vision offers grace
For sight to see the past, and more:
One’s inner light may cross the years
To leave a mortal lifetime’s trace
Upon unknown frontiers.


This poem plays around a bit with the idea that we're kind of seeing the past when we look at the night sky, because it takes a long time for the light from the stars to reach the Earth. And it begins to ask what our own lives will show to the universe, as our light radiates outward from the Earth.