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Updated: Feb 24, 2023

For much of history the best stories were poems. Poetry displayed skill, clarity of mind, and insight. Some even used it to show the distinction between classes and worlds. There are entire books of it in the Bible, largely ignored for its poetic value because we are reading in translation.


And so we have castigated it as a trite and angsty form, leaving it to die alongside our own shriveled hearts.

So we need to start at the beginning.


These are poems to train children to love poetry.




We sat within the farm-house old,

      Whose windows, looking o'er the bay,

Gave to the sea-breeze damp and cold,

      An easy entrance, night and day.


Not far away we saw the port,

      The strange, old-fashioned, silent town,

The lighthouse, the dismantled fort,

      The wooden houses, quaint and brown.


We sat and talked until the night,

      Descending, filled the little room;

Our faces faded from the sight,

      Our voices only broke the gloom.


We spake of many a vanished scene,

      Of what we once had thought and said,

Of what had been, and might have been,

      And who was changed, and who was dead;


And all that fills the hearts of friends,

      When first they feel, with secret pain,

Their lives thenceforth have separate ends,

      And never can be one again;


The first slight swerving of the heart,

      That words are powerless to express,

And leave it still unsaid in part,

      Or say it in too great excess.


The very tones in which we spake

      Had something strange, I could but mark;

The leaves of memory seemed to make

      A mournful rustling in the dark.


Oft died the words upon our lips,

      As suddenly, from out the fire

Built of the wreck of stranded ships,

      The flames would leap and then expire.


And, as their splendor flashed and failed,

      We thought of wrecks upon the main,

Of ships dismasted, that were hailed

      And sent no answer back again.


The windows, rattling in their frames,

      The ocean, roaring up the beach,

The gusty blast, the bickering flames,

      All mingled vaguely in our speech;


Until they made themselves a part

      Of fancies floating through the brain,

The long-lost ventures of the heart,

      That send no answers back again.


O flames that glowed! O hearts that yearned!

      They were indeed too much akin,

The drift-wood fire without that burned,

      The thoughts that burned and glowed within.


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katemyers222

Updated: Feb 23, 2023

Lent, rises like John

from Jordan threatening

the locust of the wilderness.

Forty days to lay waste

to wasted lives and grieve

The loss of things and thoughts

and thoughtlessness.


It burns like bug eaten breath to see

how little I’ve thought of you;

how I’ve thought little of you;

how I’ve given little thought to you.


I’ve forgotten I can stand on rooftips,

listing timbers, uncorked sinkholes,

as safe in battle as in bed

as safe here, as in heaven itself.


Eight days ago, St Valentine died

beaten or beheaded for brides

and grooms unwedded

for king’s fool games.

We love him for his cant

towards sweeter manners

and make ours worse for it.


Cut out your damned eyes,

Let the scales fall

and wash the mud.

Wash in Jordan, seven times

like the gentile before you.

He who would nod

to his king’s god

has more faith than you.


On this eighth day we will pray

to circumcise our hearts.

We ask to be made ready,

a bride looking towards her love,

the rising Son. We dread

our own betrothal, when

we lauded its keeper.


Today, we begin see

the dazzling splendour

we miss because our eyes

are blinded by the sun.

We give up wine,

and take up water

When whisky sits

a world of brine and smoke.

We do not give up rightly,

but slaughter things rightly held.

Our lent lost its laughter

with diet ridden clatter.

God is not weak.

Our Groom’s world

not soft insipidity,

stooped by giving up anything

or indeed everything.

You cannot give where

he has not made more full.


Try.


Lent rises like John from Jordan

Fill your bridal lamps and wait.

The Spirit and the Bride say, ”Come”

There is honey in the wilderness

Come out of the wasteland,

Oh you of little faith.

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katemyers222
Duties and studies and exertions are painful; for these too are necessarily compulsions unless they become habitual; then habit makes them pleasurable.

All discipline is for the moment unpleasant; but afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to them who are disciplined by it.

  • Heb 12:11





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