“The Earth would die if the sun
stopped kissing her.”
Hafiz, or Khwajeh Shams al-Din Muhammad
Hafez-e Shirazi, a 14th-century Persian mystic and poet.
The eye it cannot choose but see
We cannot bid the ear be still
The redbreast sings from the tall
larch
All servants of thy will.
The weed that creeps along the
humblest ground
nurtured by twisted roots beneath
the clay,
mourns when one kindly growth
retires
yet you grant another light of day.
You rule the pomp of light and shade
with all that issues from your
glorious fount,
You regulate the motion of our
dreams
would that we might sometimes take
account.
Ocean and earth compete for your
regard,
Your timid day, mingling with the
night
stakes claim to favourite child
yet each must in its turn melt from
your sight.
Calm as water when the wind is gone
your gaze,
no need have you of conscience or to
pray,
But gently guide age to his alloted
nook
while nurturing fresh blossoms,
March or May.
Against or with our wanton will or
wish
Our bodies can but feel what they
can see
as far south as the south goes or
north
and east and west or up or down with
thee.
It is a heart, a hard heart that
keeps till June
the iron shards of December's ice,
Much it grieves to see what man has
made of man,
Robs his brother of a grain of rice.
You season my fireside with heat and
friendly chat
of wilderness and wood, blank ocean
and mere sky,
If you might doze for forty days of
Lent
Forever we would vanish from your
quiet eye.
(for Turquoise, friend of Blue)
Truly a gift! I so appreciate the effort that went into this elegant stream of beauty and brightness. (Compiled from "Personal Talk," "To the Same," "So Fair, So Sweet, Withal So Sensitive," and -- "The Excursion"?)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. May the sun shine on you always.
~ Turquoise
Thank you Turquoise for the generous comment and the blessing. What a lovely wish! Kindest regards P+P.
ReplyDelete