Monday, February 28, 2011

I Measure Every Grief I meet


I measure every grief I meet
by Emily Dickinson

I measure every grief I meet
With analytic eyes;
I wonder if it weighs like mine,
Or has an easier size.

I wonder if they bore it long,

Or did it just begin?
I could not tell the date of mine,
It feels so old a pain.

I wonder if it hurts to live,

And if they have to try,
And whether, could they choose between,
They would not rather die.

I wonder if when years have piled--

Some thousands--on the cause
Of early hurt, if such a lapse
Could give them any pause;

Or would they go on aching still

Through centuries above,
Enlightened to a larger pain
By contrast with the love.

The grieved are many, I am told;

The reason deeper lies,--
Death is but one and comes but once
And only nails the eyes.

There's grief of want, and grief of cold,--

A sort they call 'despair,'
There's banishment from native eyes,
In sight of native air.

And though I may not guess the kind

Correctly yet to me
A piercing comfort it affords
In passing Calvary,

To note the fashions of the cross

Of those that stand alone
Still fascinated to presume
That some are like my own.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Candles


Candles - C. P. Cavafy


Days to come stand in front of us
like a row of lighted candles—
golden, warm, and vivid candles.

Days gone by fall behind us,
a gloomy line of snuffed-out candles;
the nearest are smoking still,
cold, melted, and bent.

I don’t want to look at them: their shape saddens me,
and it saddens me to remember their original light.
I look ahead at my lighted candles.

I don’t want to turn for fear of seeing, terrified,
how quickly that dark line gets longer,
how quickly the snuffed-out candles proliferate.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Spring


Spring is like a perhaps hand
(which comes carefully
out of Nowhere)arranging
a window,into which people look(while
people stare
arranging and changing placing
carefully there a strange
thing and a known thing here)and

changing everything carefully

spring is like a perhaps
Hand in a window
(carefully to
and from moving New and
Old things,while
people stare carefully
moving a perhaps
fraction of flower here placing
an inch of air there)and

without breaking anything.

e.e.cummings

Lional Johnson

Lionel Johnson
by Joyce Kilmer

(For the Rev. John J. Burke, C. S. P.)

There was a murkier tinge in London's air

As if the honest fog blushed black for shame.
Fools sang of sin, for other fools' acclaim,
And Milton's wreath was tossed to Baudelaire.
The flowers of evil blossomed everywhere,
But in their midst a radiant lily came
Candescent, pure, a cup of living flame,
Bloomed for a day, and left the earth more fair.

And was it Charles, thy "fair and fatal King",

Who bade thee welcome to the lovely land?
Or did Lord David cease to harp and sing
To take in his thine emulative hand?
Or did Our Lady's smile shine forth, to bring
Her lyric Knight within her choir to stand?