Wednesday, December 19, 2012

One Christmas Wish





If you had asked her a month ago
I dare say she would have had a list
But now she’s down to one big wish
All she wants for Christmas is snow

She’s tried her best to bring it on
Singing ‘let it snow, let it snow’
But the ground remains bare and cold
A few dry leaves garnish the lawn

She’s almost down to one hand, you know
Of finger-counting sleeps
But with unwavering faith of a child she keeps
Dreaming and hoping and praying for snow

© Janet Martin

The Magic of Christmas




When the purple wood-smoke circles
Into five o’clock afternoon
When silver of snowflake spirals
Like sugar from heaven’s spoon
When shouts of happy children
Sparkle in the frosty air
I feel the magic of Christmas
Descend like an evening prayer

When spicy-sweet fills the kitchen
With flavors that pleasure and tease
When buttered sugar-flour creations
Bring back childhood memories
When gingerbread, shortbread, plum-pudding
Flaunt tempting, annual art
I feel the magic of Christmas
Warming the home in my heart

When dear ageless songs of the season
Thrill both the aged and youth
As carolers exalt the Reason
Of glory-child’s Christmas truth
When glitter of ribbons and paper
Covers each table and chair
I feel the magic of Christmas
Cradle the earth in a prayer

When sorrow and joy-blended beauty
Aches in the atmosphere
When we lay aside mundane duty
To revel in this season’s cheer
When all of the hurt that might hinder
We kindly and firmly release
I feel the magic of Christmas
And oh, its sweet magic is peace

I cherish the magic of Christmas
And pray it will never cease

© Janet Martin

Who Is This Babe of Bethlehem?





Son of God
Son of Man
Tender Shepherd
Spotless Lamb
Everlasting
Father, Child
Born to virgin
Mary mild

Prince of Peace
King of kings
Consuming Fire
Offering
On Calvary
Suffering alone
Down to earth
From Heaven’s throne

Jesus Christ
One true God
Sacrifice
Victor and Rod
The beginning
And the end
Holy wrath
And faithful friend

Alpha and Omega
One
Yet Father, Holy Spirit
Son
Who is this Babe
Of Bethlehem?
He is God
He is I AM

Janet~



Touch





It is a wonderful thing
Flesh
Warm
Pulsing
And full
Of what
Living may bring

It is no small gift
Inhale
Exhale
Touch
Kiss
Ripple of moments
As they drift

It is almost too much
Ebb
Flow
Hold
Let go
Yet ever hungry for
More of love’s touch

J~

The Way of Days and Other Such Things





Like honey-suckle of summer
Soon this little day will lie
Beneath the shrouds of winter
And December’s lullaby

Like snow upon the fallow
Melting in the high-noon sun
This day slips to the hollow
Where all life’s moments run

We rise, but to surrender
No one can flee or steal
Time’s portent from the fingers
Of the Potter at the wheel

The orbit of each season
Like all things living must
Relinquish transient reason
Returning dust to dust

Like the wick of a candle
Illuminated by a spark
Before the puff of winter
Snuffs its light and it is dark

© Janet Martin

A Mother's Prayer for Her School Children





They must go
Dear Lord, I know
It is the way of life
A little child
Must learn to fly
Too soon the spoil and strife
Of living will
Blow good and ill
Across their tender way
And even now
I see a cloud
Creep up across the day
So thus I plead
Lord, fill their need
With Your compassion, then
If you deem fit
Dear Lord, please bring
The children home again

© Janet Martin

So many things we suddenly no longer take for granted...

That's What Makes it Special

 

'It's just a poem, that's all'
and her words hang in the air
as she turns to me
with a reckless stare
while I order her and her brother
to sit down
and listen to their mother...
(I ignore their frowns:)
Because, I replied,
A poem is never
'just a poem'
It is unlike
any other form
of printed word
placed, interlaced,
broken then shirred
Taking ordinary
bits of sound
Weaving them softly
jagged, profound
into heart-wrenching treasure
or kisses of pleasure
Beauty, mystery
and ecstasy.
That's poetry
...a fire in one's bosom
that refuses to die
until it is set free
 ...like a butterfly
keening the mind
to night's sensuous flow
or running one's thought
where feet cannot go
That's a poem, you know
Waves pressing hard
restless, they rage
held against their will
in an ivory cage
until at last they spill
onto a page
where they will be
forever preserved
in poetry
and that's what makes it special

Janet~

It all began with the mention of someone's name...and suddenly I remembered him reciting a poem at a school Christmas concert so I was going to find it and read it to them. My son asked, as I went to the computer, 'What are you looking for and my teen-age daughter replied...'just a poem':)

Here is the Poem I was Looking for...


One, Two, Three

By Henry Cuyler Bunner


It was and old, old, old, old lady
And a boy that was half-past three,
And the way that they played together
Was beautiful to see.
She couldn't go romping and jumping,
And the boy, no more could he;
For he was a thin little fellow,
With a thin little twisted knee.
They sat in the yellow sunlight,
Out under the maple tree,
And the game that they played I'll tell you,
Just as it was told to me.
It was hide-and-go-seek they were playing,
Though you'd never have known it to be--
With an old, old, old, old lady
And a boy with a twisted knee.
The boy would bend his face down
On his little sound right knee,
And he guessed where she was hiding
In guesses One, Two, Three.
"You are in the china closet!"
He would cry, and laugh with glee--
It wasn't the china closet,
But he still has Two and Three.
"You are up in papa's big bedroom,
In the chest with the queer old key,"
And she said: "You are warm and warmer;
But you are not quite right, "said she.

"It can't be the little cupboard
Where mama's things used to be--
So it must be in the clothes press, Gran'ma,"
And he found her with his Three.
Then she covered her face with her fingers,
That were wrinkled and white and wee,
And she guessed where the boy was hiding,
With a One and a Two and a Three.
And they never had stirred from their places
Right under the maple tree--
This old, old, old, old lady
And the boy with the lame little knee--
This dear, dear, dear old lady
And the boy who was half-past three.



Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Un-coincidental...



 

'How did you know?'
I heard myself asking
As your thought touched mine
In passing

…it is inevitable, I suppose
After suffering thorns
At last, sweet last
The rose

J~