The slender antenna of awareness
combing the air for messages."
In "Revival" Luci Shaw anticipates spring and, like Shaw, I'm here for it.
Revival
by Luci Shaw
March. I am beginning
to anticipate a thaw. Early mornings
the earth, old unbeliever, is still crusted with frost
where the moles have nosed up their
cold castings, and the ground cover
in shadow under the cedars hasn't softened
for months, fogs layering their slow, complicated ice
around foliage and stem
night by night,
....
(Read the rest here.)
~~~~~~~~~~
16 comments:
I love that light, as a preacher of good news. Beautiful, Karen!
Lovely poem 🤗 I am not *quite* anticipating Spring thaws, just yet! Here in the frozen tundra we are apparently expecting a foot of snow for the Annunciation ...❄️🕊❄️
Spring was here yesterday with 81-degree temperature and today with grayness, rainstorms, and damp weather. I am also ready like the preacher to:
"beckon green
out of gray". Thanks for the introduction to a new poet, Karen.
What a great poem! Luci Shaw is new to me -- love your opening quote, too.
What a beautiful poem, Karen. Thanks for introducing me to Lucy Shaw. And I love her definition of what a poet is.
These are lovely-- so great to read poems from a poet I've never met before. Thank you for sharing!
Love "combing the air for messages" & the poem, wow! I printed it out to hang up, maybe every March? Thanks, Karen, love "and my hand up, too".
My hand is up, too! The single bee (I saw one weeks ago on the hellebore blooms) and the crocuses spoke my spring love language.
So many hands up! :D And so many varying weather reports, lol.
So happy to introduce many of you to Luci Shaw. She and Madeleine L'Engle were close friends and L'Engle wrote a book about their friendship, FRIENDS FOR THE JOURNEY, which I read a long time ago. Need to pull that one off the shelf again.
Karen, I love the first stanza and how it holds us in the throes of still-winter and gives us time to notice its details...just before that preacher-light transforms everything around us. I'm living in the first stanza still (and loving it).
Wow. "Old unbeliever." And all those fabulous concrete nouns. What an earthy poem--it FEELS like a northern spring. Thanks, Karen!
Alleluia!
Wow! That opening poem says it all! Thanks for sharing it. :-)
Beautiful. Thanks for sharing, Karen, and Happy Spring to you!
I'm feeling the joys of spring throughout the combox. :) Happy to spread the joy!
I love the Ted Kooser poem you shared. Thanks for hosting.
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