Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Voices of Light’

“Though Love appears far off,
you will move into its depth.”

Hadewijch of Brabant (13th c.)

from The Mirror of Simple Souls

She is alone in love, the Phoenix alone.
The soul is solitary in love,
the soul has all and has nothing,
she knows all and knows nothing,
yet she swims in the sea of joy,
swims in the sea of delights flowing and streaming
down from the Godhead.
The soul feels no joy
for she is joy
swimming and floating in joy.
She lives in joy. Joy lives in her.

Marguerite  Porete (13-14th c.)

“You can make blossom in me
flowers of fire.”

Huang O (1498-1569)

 

Read Full Post »

    

Sky links cloud waves, links dawn fog.

The star river is about to turn.

A thousand sails dance.

Li Ch’ing-Chao

from “Where Am I Going?”

(translated by Tony Barnstone and Chou Ping)

w/ photos of the Colorado sky at sunrise

by Jane Beal

 

 

 

Read Full Post »

Answering Li Ying who Showed Me

his Poems about Summer Fishing

Though he lived in the same lane,

a whole year we didn’t meet

until his tender phrases touched this aging woman.

I broke a new cinnamon branch.

The Tao nature cheats ice and snow.

The enlightened heart laughs at summer silks.

Footsteps climb the River of Clouds

lost beyond roads in the sea of mist.

(Translated by Jeffrey Waters)

Read Full Post »

Yesterday, I received a gift, a book of poems sent to me by mail for my birthday: Voices of Light: Spiritual and Visionary Poems by Women around the World from Ancient Sumeria to Now edited by Aliki Barnstone. It came to me from my friend Katrina in Chicago. It is full of astonishing and lovely poems. I am reading them curiously, joyfully, and with great, particular attention. They deserve this from me and from all their readers.

Sometimes the short poems stand out like red poppies in a green field. This one was like that:

“Light and Earth”

Most beautiful of things I leave is sunlight.

Then come glazing stars and the moon’s face.

Then ripe cucumbers and apples and pears.

Praxilla

(ca. 450 BCE)

I will meditate more on these poems in the days to come.

(Thank you, Katrina!)

Read Full Post »