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A Skinny Fairtrade Latte in the Food Court of Life - Page 477

  • "Haphazard by Starlight" - Day 22

    Ode to Winter

    By Gillian Clarke

     

    We hoard light, hunkered in holt and burrow,

    In cave, cwtsh, den, earth, hut, lair.

    Sun blinks.  Trees take down their hair.

    Dusk wipes horizons, seeps into the room,

    The last flame of geranium in the gloom.

     

    In the shortening day, bring in late flowers

    To crisp in a vase, beech to break into leaf,

    A branch of larch.  Take winter by the throat.

    Feed the common birds, tits and finches,

    The spotted woodpecker in his opera coat.

     

    Let's learn to love the icy winter moon,

    Or moonless dark and winter constellations,

    Jupiter's glow, a slow, incoming plane,

    Neighbourly windows, someone's flickering screen,

    A lamp-lit page, drawn curtains.

     

    Let us praise intimacy, talk and books,

    Music and silence, wind and rain,

    The beautiful bones of trees, taste of cold air,

    Darkening fields, the glittering city,

    That winter longing, hiraeth, something like prayer.

     

    Under the stilled heartbeat of trees,

    Wind-snapped branches, mulch and root,

    A million bluebell bulbs lie low

    Ready to flare in lengthening light,

    After the dark, frozen earth, the snow.

     

    Out there, fox and buzzard, kite and crow

    Are clearing the ground for the myth.

    On the darkest day bring to the tree,

    Cool and pungent as forest.  Turn up the music.

    Pour us a glass. Dress the house in pagan finery.

  • Displacement

    I should be getting my head round the Christmas Day 'thought' but instead I went out to the supermarket to but stuff to bake angels for Christmas Eve and Christmas puds for Christmas Day!

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    As I went through the check-out my six "serves four" (greedy people? pit workers?) puddings and assorted tubes of coloured icing, it prompted remarks from the girl serving me, and sparked a good conversation between us and the female BB officer from 167th Glasgow who packing my bags.

    Six alcohol-free puds should serve the 40+ guests, along with trifles, ice-cream and mince pies.

    The last time I found the Christmas Day 'message' this tricky was the year Woolies went under along with various other retailers, and I felt I needed to address that.  This year has a similar feel as austerity bites hard and the most vulnerable in society suffer most.  I have a feeling the lunch will say more than my words ever could...

  • 'Haphazard by Starlight' - Day 21

    At the Winter Solstice

    by Jane Kenyon


    The pines look black in the half-

    light of dawn.  Stillness...

    While we slept an inch of new snow

    simplified the field.  Today of all days

    the sun will shine no more

    than is strictly necessary.

     

    At the village church last night

    the boys - shepherds and wisemen -

    pressed close ot the manger in obedience,

    wishing only for time to pass;

    but the girl dressed as Mary trembled

    as she leaned over the pungent hay,

    and like the mother of Christ

    wondered why she had been chosen.

     

    After the pageant, a ruckus of cards,

    presents, and homemade Christmas sweets.

    A few of us stayed to clear the bright

    scraps and ribbons from the pews,

    and lift the pulpit back in place.

     

    When I opened the hundred-year-old Bible

    to Luke's account of the Epiphany

    black dust from the binding rubbed off

    on my hands, and on the altar cloth.

  • Nothing is wasted...

    ... and in all things God works for good for those who love him.

    These are two of my theological maxims (along with "faith without deeds is dead").

    Today I traipsed down to Ibrox in the pouring rain having managed to get a 'next day' appointment to see the people who supply lymphoedema sleeves to the NHS in Glasgow.  I not only needed a new sleeve but my lymphoedema has spread to my hand, leaving me with fingers that resemble a bunch of juicy sausages, and a hand like a small, pink balloon!

    Anyway, the young woman measured me up for a new sleeve and glove, advising on the best combination to avoid creating a hiatus in my wrist or forearm.

    She then said, are you going home [viz to England] for Christmas?  No, I said, I'm working, which opened the way for a short conversation about what I do, the Christmas Day lunch at church, the likely hospital visits and so on.

    Now, God certainly did not smite me with cancer, and especially did not do so in order to make me talk to people about what I do for a living or about my faith. But (never start a sentence with a coinjunction except for dramatic effect) given that it happened, I have had unexpected and unpressurised opportunities to talk to all sorts of people about such things.  I do not "give them the gospel" though I kind of hope that my demeanour might speak more than my words.  I do not challenge them about their faith or life, though will engage in conversation if asked.  And what I find is that people are interested (and amazed at the Christmas Day lunch) and open.

    Nothing is wasted... in all things God works for good... if we are willing to do our bit, too.

  • 'Haphazard by Starlight' - Day 20

    Northumbrian Sequence, 4

    by Kathleen Raine

    Let in the wind,
    Let in the rain,
    Let in the moors tonight,

    The storm beats on my window-pane,
    Night stands at my bed-foot,
    Let in the fear,
    Let in the pain,
    Let in the trees that toss and groan,
    Let in the north tonight.

    Let in the nameless formless power
    That beats upon my door,
    Let in the ice, let in the snow,
    The banshee howling on the moor,
    The bracken-bush on the bleak hillside,
    Let in the dead tonight.

    The whistling ghost behind the dyke,
    The dead that rot in the mire,
    Let in the thronging ancestors,
    The unfilled desire,
    Let in the wraith of the dead earl,
    Let in the dead tonight.

    Let in the cold,
    Let in the wet,
    Let in the loneliness,
    Let in the quick,
    Let in the dead,
    Let in the unpeopled skies.

    Oh how can virgin fingers weave
    A covering for the void,
    How can my fearful heart conceive
    Gigantic solitude?
    How can a house so small contain
    A company so great?
    Let in the dark,
    Let in the dead,
    Let in your love tonight.

    Let in the snow that numbs the grave,
    Let in the acorn-tree,
    The mountain stream and mountain stone,
    Let in the bitter sea.

    Fearful is my virgin heart
    And frail my virgin form,
    And must I then take pity on
    The raging of the storm
    That rose up from the great abyss
    Before the earth was made,
    That pours the stars in cataracts
    And shakes this violent world?

    Let in the fire,
    Let in the power,
    Let in the invading might.

    Gentle must my fingers be
    And pitiful my heart
    Since I must bind in human form
    A living power so great,
    A living impulse great and wild
    That cries about my house
    With all the violence of desire
    Desiring this my peace.

    Pitiful my heart must hold
    The lonely stars at rest,
    Have pity on the raven’s cry,
    The torrent and the eagle’s wing,
    The icy water of the tarn
    And on the biting blast.

    Let in the wound,
    Let in the pain,
    Let in your child tonight.

     

    (I am very grateful to have found this online rather than having to type it in myself!!)