Marian Poetry
by
Father Kilian McDonnell©
IN THE
KITCHEN
('In the sixth month the angel Gabriel...' Luke 1:26)
Bellini has it wrong, I was not kneeling on my satin cushion, in a beam of light, head slightly bent.
Painters always skew the scene, as though my life were wrapped in silks, in temple smells.
Actually, I had just come back from the
well,
placing the pitcher on the table
I bumped against the edge, spilling water on
the floor.
As I bent to wipe it up, there was a light against the kitchen wall,
as though someone had opened the door to the sun.
Rag in hand,
hair across my face,
I turned to see who was entering,
unannounced, unasked.
All I saw was light
white against the timbers.
A voice I've never
heard greeted me,
said I was elected, would
bear a son who'd reign
forever. The spirit would
overshadow me. I stood afraid.
Someone closed the door
and I dropped the rag.
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AN OLD WOMAN REMEMBERS I
THE ANGEL COMES
Ignorant, scarcely thirteen when the speaking light catches me barefoot in the kitchen,
soiled torn apron, hair undone, garbage crock almost full.
Splendor breaks into the room without a warning, says
I’m chosen, places a bundle of hard wood upon a reed, waits for my “yes.”
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AN OLD WOMAN REMEMBERS II
SHAME
Pregnant before the bridal bed, child carrying child., knowing nods
as the village women see me pass down the back alley, whispers, sudden
silences at market as I reach across the leeks for fresh hard cucumbers from the country,
-- every choice signs away tomorrow – teenage sideway glances and giggles. Secret
awe at the unwed mother. (How long had this been going on?) No one sits beside me
on the bench in synagogue. I see bags under Joseph’s dark eyes. I’m alone.
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AN OLD WOMAN
REMEMBERS III
BETHLEHEM
Eight months gone, I ride donkey, Joseph walks ninety miles to Bethlehem.
Our cave is cold and damp, oxen stamp their feet at the invasion, two nervous
doves shuffle back and forth on the rafters as though knowing my water had burst
on the back of the donkey, which looked around to see whence the warm June shower
in December. The unappeasable pain on spikey schedule, while Joseph cobbles dirty
straw from the stable corners to make a bed; my birth stool a broken feed box.
I push the child into his knobby hands as the stable door creaks and three
oriental potentates kneel before the bawling baby -- the placenta on the ground.-- They bring
gifts on dromedaries over Arabian sands, laying gold, frankincense and myrrh
at our feet, while I need a basin of hot water, clean towels, and piles of diapers.
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AN OLD WOMAN REMEMBERS IV
THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT
When dark clouds cover moon’s craters we push open creaky stable doors, lead the donkey out to leave for Egypt before Herod’s soldiers pound upon gate. We hear
Rachels screaming, sons slaughtered by decree, while we angle across plowed barley fields, like robbers with sagging bags of silver drachmas, always looking back, avoiding
roads. Stadia and stadia later we hear uncertain night noises
of distant battles, lost and won: an ox bellowing, and the hissing of ten
skin-headed vultures
as they claw and squabble over a dead sheep. We pass on the far side. After two weeks off Gaza roads we’ve not crossed the border, but far
enough to rest a day beside a huge
abandoned columbarium, rebels’ lair, filled with white bird droppings, and coppery green pigeon feathers. To rest the donkey Joseph stops beneath a turpentine tree while my infant
wails, wet diaper full once more. On a flat rock I change him, give him my nipple. He’s beautiful beyond all imagining. In thorn bushes Joseph finds a nest
of sand colored eggs, enough to get us to the Nile. What cobra-crowned Ramses reigns as Son of sun- god Re, demanding bricks, withholding straw, and knows not Joseph?
-
CANA, OR NOT A
PERFECT CARPENTER (They
have no wine. John 2:3 Like us in all things but sin. Hebrews 4:15)
It had to come from somewhere.
Expectations have histories.
Out of the blue one does not say, “They
have no wine,” as though remarking on the
gathering of the clouds, or how
late the spring
this year. Surely she knew before she came.
Had he bent more than nails, as he
hammered the oak plank, cut too short for
the table top,
and turning to be
sure the door was closed, had he, in a
stolen moment, lengthen it an inch or two,
a quick impatient wonder
to cover his mistake?
But through the
lattice, had she seen, smiled and
understood. Had she asked him to build a
porch with beams from Lebanon, where she could
catch the breeze, watch
the sun go down?
Then as the hard wood rafters began
to drop, did he twist the
law of gravity, put a kink in the path
of falling timbers?
And
did she duck – and marvel?
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These poems, as well as several other Marian poems, have been published in
Swift, Lord, You Are Not (Collegeville: St. John's University Press [and
imprint of Liturgical Press], 2003), and Yahweh's Other Shoe
(Collegeville: St. John's University Press [and imprint of Liturgical Press],
2006).
The above poems have been reproduced with the permission of the author, Father Kilian McDonnell, OSB, who holds the copyright to them.
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