Monday, July 2, 2018

Momentous Tids and Bits

This neighbour, who plows my garden every fall and does the first till every spring 
laid his wife of 42 years, to rest on Saturday.

"The verse that keeps coming to my heart for him", I remarked to Victoria on our way home from the funeral visitation last week (as we both were struck by his utterly bereaved countenance)
Here is a man who took care of his suffering/bed-ridden wife for many years!
yet even so, death came unexpectedly...

(This was the 2nd Saturday in a row that I attended a funeral at the church of my childhood.
plus a few visitations during the week...
a sign that I'm getting older and nearer to the 'outer ripples' of this generation?:)


....then there was Canada Day...already again!

A year beginning to feel a little like a firework fizzle...flare and fade!
...or like a sun-sparkle on sea and sand; we stare amazed, reach but can never grasp
its shimmer through our fingers!


Ah, ache we cannot quell where well we know what moments mete
The breaking and the binding of its swell like fields of wheat
Where seasons sprout; the clout of teeny tick by tock supreme
Whilst death reminds us to regard moments with high esteem

Ah, beauty meets the eye and poets sigh and farmers grin
For seed begets the fruit where soon the harvest will begin
The quest for satisfaction a thirst nothing can fulfill
Unless we recognize the prize that moments cup and spill

Ah, tender troubadour, you tease us with your give and take
Meandering through gardens weaving echoes in your wake
Where we cannot afford to miss one glorious syllable
Of summer’s silver-speckled sea-song’s ‘so-long canticle’

We grasp and clasp dawn’s fading flow’r; a wonder full of woes
Dismantles moments of an hour like petals from a rose
The sway of night to day murmurs summer’s sweet green to gold
Compelling us to look closer at moments in our hold

Ah, happiness, to find you is no secret if we see
That you are here and now; not an elusive destiny 
The laughter of a child, a garden flower-wild, a brook
A you-and-me that makes the 'we', we dare not overlook

© Janet Martin





One of the little guys I babysit was delighted when I told him he may pick the green grapes to put in his loader because first-year vines need to put all their energy into the plant!





2 comments:

  1. So sorry you’ve had to deal with much loss. Love the beauty and hopeful tone of your poem.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank-you Trish! (hope you are keeping cool on this another-scorcher!)

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I hope you enjoyed your pause on this porch and thank-you for your visit!