It's been a tough week, and I find myself emotionally exhausted on Sunday morning. In the course of my pottering, I clear out the bedside table drawer to find a volume of verse, a birthday present from a friend. His note in the frontispiece guides me to four poems, among them one that resonates beautifully:
Trying To Ripen
By Linda Gregg
I thought if I lived alone
in stillness, God would be closer.
Or if I lived beyond aging and dying.
Now I look at the birds
and the orchard with longing.
There is ripe fruit on the ground.
It is time for migration,
but I am still not transformed.
I have become like the desert.
Today I saw a large red snake
and a covey of quail
strong enough now to fly over
the fence. I saw distance.
Sunday, 11 November 2007
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2 comments:
May you find grace and healing in the smallest leaf.
This is a beautiful poem. I often forget about Linda Gregg’s verse. Her poems always seem shy & unassuming. Yet her tenacity is so quietly her own. Thanks for posting this.
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