Thursday, March 28, 2019

Saint Rev. Father Robert Southwell (1561 - 1595) : "The Virgin Mary To Christ On The Cross"


What mist hath dimm'd that glorious face?

What seas of grief my sun doth toss?

The golden rays of heavenly grace

Lies now eclipsed on the cross.



Jesus, my love, my Son, my God,

Behold Thy mother wash'ed in tears:

Thy bloody wounds be made a rod

To chasten these my later years.



You cruel Jews, come work your ire 

Upon this  worthless flesh of mine,

And kindle not eternal fire

By wounding Him who is divine.



Thou messenger that didst impart 

His first descent into my womb,

Come help me now to cleave my heart,

That there I may my Son entomb.



You angels, all that present were

To show His birth with harmony,

Why are you not now ready here,

To make a mourning symphony?



The cause I know you wail alone,

And shed your tears in secrecy,

Lest I should moved be to moan,

By force of heavy company.



But wail, my soul, thy comfort dies,

My woful womb, lament thy fruit;

My heart give tears unto mine eyes,

Let sorrow string my heavy lute.




Fr. Robert Southwell's poems - 
LUMINARIUM 

Saint Rev. Fr. Robert Southwell  Forty Martyrs of England and Wales


Thursday, February 28, 2019

Gordon Lightfoot (1938) : If You Could Read My Mind



If you could read my mind, love

What a tale my thoughts could tell


Just like an old time movie


'Bout a ghost from a wishing well


In a castle dark or a fortress strong


With chains upon my feet


You know that ghost is me


And I will never be set free


As long as I'm a ghost that you can't see.




If I could read your mind, love

What a tale your thoughts could tell

Just like a paperback novel

The kind the drugstores sell

Then you reach the part where the heartaches come

The hero would be me

But heroes often fail

And you won't read that book again 

Because the ending's just too hard to take!




I'd walk away like a movie star

Who gets burned in a three way script

Enter number two:

A movie queen to play the scene

Of bringing all the good things out in me



. . .





"If You Could Read My Mind" by Gordon Lightfoot   
written 1969 - recorded 1970


Wednesday, February 27, 2019


Nevertheless, as much as I, within

my mind, could treasure of the holy kingdom

shall now become the matter of my song.




From "The Divine Comedy"
Paradiso, Canto I
Everyman's Library

Translation Allen Mandelbaum (1926 - 2011)


Sunday, November 4, 2018

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) : from "The Masque of Pandora"



Let us go forth from this mysterious place.

The garden walks are pleasant at this hour;

The nightingales among the sheltering boughs

Of populous and many-nested trees

Shall teach me how to woo thee, and shall tell me

By what resistless charms or incantations

They won their mates.




To a Nightingale
Poems from Sappho to Borges
Edited by Edward Hirsch
George Braziller Inc. 2007



H. W. Longfellow  The Masque of Pandora 
1875



Saturday, November 3, 2018

introducing Mr. Copper





<> Photography

Lisa Olstein : "Dear One Absent This Long While"



It has been so wet stones glaze in moss;
everything blooms coldly.

I expect you. I thought one night it was you
at the base of the drive, you at the foot of the stairs,

you in a shiver of light, but each time
leaves in wind revealed themselves,

the retreating shadow of a fox, daybreak.
We expect you, cat and I, bluebirds and I, the stove.

In May we dreamed of wreaths burning on bonfires
over which young men and women leapt.

June efforts quietly.
I've planted vegetables along each garden wall

so even if spring continues to disappoint
we can say at least the lettuce loved the rain.

I have new gloves and a new hoe.
I practice eulogies. He was a hawk

with white feathered legs. She had the quiet ribs
of a salamander crossing the old pony post road.

Yours is the name the leaves chatter
at the edge of the unrabbited woods.



Poem of the Day, posted by The Poetry Foundation on April 20, 2018