Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Angels Among Us...



 There was some serious concentration going on in these 'flying-lessons'. 
And she was SO proud of her angel:)

Some think angels wear white feathers
Haloed beings, ethereal
I’ve seen angels dressed in purple
Laughter-wild and kissable

Some think angels live in heaven
I have witnessed otherwise
Angels flying on the earth where
Heaven scattered paradise

Some think angels live among us
I have seen the proof full-well
Purple-mitten bundled cherubs
Flying where winter’s stars fell

© Janet Martin

Time's Timeless Touch




It's really cold today...the kind of day when one could feel housebound but there are lots of little life-love-notes to enjoy...

 Hot-chocolate-hot granola toasts...
peek-a-boo, I love you...
Lots of....love-clutter letters
Christmas clutter pretties;-)
Brothers...


I love the way time fills its tray
With graces that beguile
And bends the common wend of day
And faces into smile

I love the art of human heart
It spills its sympathies
And blurs the mundane curves of life
Into a masterpiece

I love the noise of girls and boys
Oh, do not hush their play
Too soon its men and women tune
The harps time gave away

I love the sound of seasons wound
Through echoes of so-long
It takes the memories we make
And turns them into song

I love the sigh of soulful ‘why’
Though it vexes thought’s stare
It teaches us to fold our reach
And turn it into prayer

© Janet Martin



Of Angel-tears (a re-post originally entitled *The Bum)

 suggested that another title might be in better taste...
Thank-you Michael:)



He glared with disdain at the old tin can
held up with hope by a dirty old man
whose eyes were too shiny, his nose was too red,
telling a tale with words unsaid,
and the young man turned with a disgusted frown
staring the old man up and down,
Then he said, “I have better things to do
than to hand out my money to a bum like you.

There’s work out there, why don’t you get some
instead of sitting here like a dirty old bum?
I’ve worked hard for the money I have
and I’ve earned my right to the way I live
so I’m not about to throw my money away
to a guy who sits on the street all day.
You’ve made your choices, I’ve made mine
and I’m not gonna pay for your whiskey or wine.”

He spun on his heel, about to leave.
No drunk was going to ruin his Christmas Eve.
His sweetheart was waiting and man, was she sweet!
So why was he talking to this bum on the street?
In another few hours he’d be whisked away
‘neath a blanket of stars, by a horse and sleigh,
snuggled beneath shawls, a hot drink in hand
with sleigh-bells a-jingling. Oh, isn’t love grand?

He turned and began to walk away
but paused as he heard the old man say,
“I was a young pup once like you
and I guess I know why you feel like you do
but until you’ve walked a mile in my shoes
I beg to differ about ‘your right to choose’.
Sometimes you gotta take what you rather would not,
and you’d do anything to trade the hand ya’ got”

The old man’s voice grew a little hoarse
as he ran his fingers through hair long and coarse.
“Yes, I remember it all real well
I had dreams, held the world by the tail.
I loved a sweet lady and she loved me
an’ we were as happy as anyone could be.
Oh, the happiest day of my entire life
was the day that sweet lady became my wife

...and the second best days I ever had
were the three great times I became a dad.
With each new little baby’s birth
we added a corner to our ‘heaven on earth’.
Our days were numbered, but we didn’t know.
We were as happy as anyone here below
until one day an old drunk ended my life
when he killed my three babies and my wife.

So, before you talk choices like winnin’ and losin’,
That we become what we are by our own choosin’,
I’d like to ask you, have you lived alone
after your ‘heaven on earth’ was gone?
Have you sat in the darkness, your 'now ever-after'
listening to the silence echo your baby’s laughter,
and still hear the voices of your precious darlings
or close your eyes to still see them smiling?

Have you heard your wife’s voice calling you
to waken alone and cry all night through?
Then, in a desperate effort to make your thoughts end
have wine or whiskey become your best friend?
Have you gone to work where they locked the door
saying, ‘you don’t work here any more’?
You may call me a bum but before you do
would you like to walk a mile in my shoes?”

The young man was speechless, what more could he say
to this man who suffered more loss in one day
than most people suffer their whole life through?
Words seemed empty from this point of view.
This was no bum, but a lonely old soul
Who, under life’s sorrow simply lost control.
His teardrops fell as he stared at his feet
then he sat down beside the old man on the street.

“Forgive me” he wept to the dirty old man,
“Oh, please forgive me if you can.
For I am the bum, the most ignorant of fools.
What do I know about any of life’s rules?
I’d fill up your can twenty times if I could
but I really don’t think it would do any good.
Far better than money, for you I believe
would be somewhere to come home to this Christmas Eve”

So, there in the cold ‘neath the streetlamps glow
sat the young man with the old in the falling snow,
as the angels looked down from heaven above
Smiling at the pair in tender love
-a young man who would never, ever choose
To walk a mile in the old man’s shoes
Slowly they both arose to their feet
and arm in arm, they walked up the street

(last verse optional)
So before we call anyone a drunk or a bum,
Perhaps we should ask them from where they have come
instead of judging, lend them an ear
and we might be appalled at the stories we hear.
God, give mercy to the poor on the street.
Their stories are the tears that the angels weep.
Shine your love on them and show them the reason
we all may have hope this Christmas Season.
Janet Martin


This poem was inspired by a tragic story on the news...


I've often wondered what became of that man, 
a jeweler whose wife and children were killed by a drunk driver.

Of Realities...





Mankind lives in a world
Of harsh reality
And so much that
We cannot change
Or satisfy
Or see

Fear is a thief of peace
Faith is a guiding light
Where we are often
Torn between
Fear’s darkness
And faith’s light

The high and low of life
Allots its groaning shares
But never without
Hope and grace
Of God who knows
And cares

The prizes that we prize
Will never be enough
If we try to
Press it into
The part reserved
For love

The heart can never hold
The clutter of cold toys
But it can overflow
With more
Than enough
Of love’s joys

© Janet Martin

As soon as we try to replace love with things we lose out.
We were made to need each other.
Let’s remember this in this ‘season of love’
And try not to be overtaken with’ Stuff’

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Before The Day-lamp Is Lit





The lamp of day is unlit still; Earth veiled in velvet black
Where soon the hand of heaven will reach down and pull it back

The noise that waits to infiltrate the hush of morning-tide
Is held at bay where time’s new day cradles the countryside

And earth is like a quiet room before the children wake
Dawn’s darkness like a budded bloom before its barriers break

…to yield to nothing but the hour’s thinning ebony
Where morning is a field brimming with flowers none can see

Save He who reaches down and lights the wick that lights our way
 As the kind faithfulness of God turns darkness into day
© Janet Martin

 But let all who take refuge in You be glad,
            Let them ever sing for joy;
            And may You shelter them,
            That those who love Your name may exult in You.      
 For it is You who blesses the righteous man, O LORD,
            You surround him with favor as with a shield.

Psalm 5:11-12