The Arts of Air

 

This poem requires blowing bubbles at the Ö

 

In order to prepare for the future:

blow wishes in four directions,

   mere rainbowed things

   too sheer to be trusted

   with heavy-handed sight. Ö

 

In order to make memories, not monuments:

Tiptoe.

 Pucker.

Blow. Ö

Now you see it. Ö

 

Now you don’t.

Impermanent.

Impertinent.

Imperative.

Gestures of hope. Ö

 

In order to succeed at Success:

    invest in breath;

    stir up a circle;

  risk the wind;

    bear the light. Ö

 

Wholly Spirit

Wholly Human

Wholly Holy. Ö

 

On you,

                    in you,

                                            through you,

 

Rain glow. Ö

 

Heather Murray Elkins©1995

All rights reserved

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Those who watch the winged world swinging on a branch or bramble

See the sacraments of earth offered every sunny day.

Those who believe in the secret life of bees and birds

Practice patience akin to prayer for a bare glimpse of heaven.

 

Those who dream of flying remain as rooted as the trees

Yet their longing is revealed in well-feathered nests

Where young can weather storms until the spring frees

Flights of imagination banded with an instinct for home.

 

Those who translate the cuckoo, the wren, whippoorwill, or chickadee

Will hear familiar sounds in the tongue of seraphim

As all things bright and beautiful cry, “Holy, Holy, Holy

To our Maker, our Mender, our Beginning and End.”

 

 In honor of Norms

Heather Murray Elkins © 2005 

All rights reserved

 


Valentine

The last thing I need in a valentine
is some under-clad cupid
trying to puncture an over-worked will
and the last reserves of control.
Unbuttoned hope just leads to exposure.
Any extremity of emotion
brought on by Hallmark
deserves all the frostbite it finds.

Life’s temperature gauge
jas been down so long
Zero is up.
No plaster saint can convince me
there’s a point to hearts and flowers
Even chocolate loses its appeal
when you pack it in your pocket
and get stuck in a snowdrift for days

When the threat of brimstone
begins to make sense
and headlines the news
it’s time to rekindle Pentecost’s
fire.

Didn’t he say,
“Keep the peace and pass the salt?’
or was it,
“Hold your salt and pass the peace?”

Didn’t he promise
The Spirit could find us
stiff as a board
stranded on ice,
frozen with fear and snow blind?

Check the calendar.
When can we turn up the heat?
Isn’t this the season
our ears should start to tingle
and our hearts get strangely warm?

Heather Murray Elkins © 1994, 2003



 

For Luther
(in spite of the law against beating dead metaphors)

Luther

I suffer from nostalgia
for a horse-drawn age
when human hearts could count
on being mounted.

Divinity driven,
thoroughly bred outlaws
once could be corralled.
By the light of a mid-evil moon
God or the Devil would croon,
“Back in the saddle again.”

Where are sage riders of this purple age?
Better to be spurred by Absolutes,
than harnessed by ambition,
and made to chaff at bits
without a destiny in hand.

Ghost-ridden in our unwilled state,
our headless heart-strung age
stampedes toward the sunset
where four pale horsemen wait.

Yet still
against the last horizon
a horsewhipped thief of sin
hangs high,
barb wired in grief.
So still
he harnesses his will
to ride our fear bareback and die.

Ride on,
ride on, Humility.
Wild is Christ’s reign,
yet meek his seat.
May we jack asses
 be
tethered by the Spirit
as we plod toward Calvary.

 

Heather Murray Elkins©1987 revised 2009
All rights reserved


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