Literature and the Arts















Sure, there are lit links and snacks scattered around this entire site, but here is a page just for them (although I am sure they will be invaded by coelacanths and things).  Because of copyright issues, I suspect it is best only to post my own work, or work that I have permission from others to post, and link to things otherwise (much as I would love to feature a Gerard Manley Hopkins poem-of-the-month, for example).  

Nikos Kazantzakis

more Kazantzakis









































Apparently obligatory cat pic #1:
morganstove4.jpg
Morgan gets a bath & hides under the wood stove.

Others' poems

Link to a poem by Yehuda Amichai, "A Man Doesn't Have Time in His Life." This poem was recently printed in the magazine The Christian Century.

Link to Gerard Manley Hopkins' poem "Pied Beauty"

Link to G.K. Chesterton's poem, "The Great Minimum"

Link to "Heaven's Neighbors" by Daniel Mark Epstein (who also wrote _What Lips My Lips Have Kissed_ a mesmerizing and sympathetic account of the life of Edna St. Vincent Millay).

Link to place on salon dot com where you can listen to Vincent reading her poetry.







Somewhere way down this page is a series of sonnets beginning "If this be love, then life holds naught for me."  I had fun writing them for some assignment that I can't even remember the context of, because I personally had to refute the opening statement each time.  Maybe you will have fun reading them.  Maybe you have fun with "sonnet math" also.

Archbishop Cranmer's Immortal Bequest: The Book of Common Prayer







OCP#2: Bath not enough; Morgan goes to the spa.
morgankneading.jpg
Yet after hydrosurge and shearing, he is kneading away.

Others' Prose

Link to "A Historical Overview of Our Topic" (women and inspiration).

Link to the great classic work "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.

THE EYE OF NIGHT, Pauline Alama's excellent original fantasy novel

Daniel Keys Moran

C.S. Friedman








































My Own Work

Rapture of the Deep

 

How precious were those moments! Each more real,

more limned in breathing heartbeats, wrapped in warmth,

than many other moments all together. What is that depth

that I should rise from it forgetting, rise to feel

this blurring of the clear? There is no breadth

the soul cannot encompass, no set width;

so there should be no decompression now to steal

those moments and retain them in the dark,

that if again I were to know them I must go

down, back down, into the past, or into those places slow

still, still having the same light and scent, marked

and tasting of your presence. I live above that water now,

but would sound those depths again if I knew how.

 

The Price of Joy

 

Have I been so long, so well confined,

Until the bruises of each breath extract

My very soul?  Still, love and fire are twined

Throughout my blood, and th'immutable Fact

Still wills to illuminate my assigned

Insurmountable hierarchy of acts.

Though dry the starving heart, and hand, I find

Within a life that I had lacked:

A new burden of slow understanding

Of our required love; a tiredness

The price of Joy.  Stubborn, I will confess

YHWH my God, without comprehending

The end of this my pain.  Be this my Cup,

I see it as golden, and I hold it up.

Church and Religion Links

Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury

The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine. My "home" cathedral & a truly wonderful place!

St. Paul's On-the-Hill, my church

The Upper Room

A wonderful project on B'rachot

The San Damiano Crucifix

The Episcopal Church in the USA

Yr Eglwys yng Nghymru: The Church in Wales

The Episcopal Diocese of New York

The Life & Work of the Church

The National Shrine of St. Francis of Assisi

Episcopal Life (periodical)

Check out The Flaming Fire Illustrated Bible and maybe add to it...

Links to sites not otherwise included above

EUROLANG, formerly known as the European Bureau for Lesser Used Languages (or something very close to that)

Bwrdd yr Iaith Gymraeg: Welsh Language Board

BBC - Wales - Hiraeth

Yarinareth

The Green Man Review

T.A. Shippey, Ph.D.

Andrew M. Greeley

Legends, Sagas & Fairy Tales

Legends

FANDATA Fandom Directory

Edna St. Vincent Millay

Desert Raindrops: a book, website, and e-newsletter about poetry

Hi Piers: The official website of Piers Anthony and Xanth

SERIES:  "IF THIS BE LOVE"

 

 

I

 

If this be love, then life holds naught for me,

Nothing of greater truth than its embrace,

Nor can life be understood until I see

Into every looming room behind each face,

Where the soul's mansion stretches placidly

From room to room:  a vast and changing place.

But if it would be only mine I see

My empire would become a tiny place.

So Love is more than love, so much indeed

That I can only do my best to guess

What I must do -- and then proceed.

I don't know either.  Mea culpa; I confess.

But if this be love:  That I must give to have,

I will give all, and so my whole soul save.

 

II

 

If this be love, then life holds naught for me,

But love is more than this, and I am free

To believe what I will.  My life is mine;

And mine my will, not to fall to the plea

That love is to command or to confine.

Love is to stretch and soar, and to align

Each reaching soul to each; theology

Of masters, practised by men, and in wine

Symbolizing the greatest stretch of all,

Through death to life in reciprocity:

Infinite to Finite, th'encircling call

Reflected in the mirror's of Love's hall

Where through the heart and soul and mind we see

Our love shine as Eve before the Fall.

 

III

 

(INAMORATE VIGOR I: for Dante)

 

If this be love, then life holds naught for me,

Naught greater in all of eternity

And beyond, and before.  Since first the Word

Moved in Thought Love was; then in Flesh freely

Once living, to be felt as well as heard.

Ruby-lipped Magdalen His rebuke endured

And still loved, instinctively and truly

Treasuring that habit which could not be cured.

Enter Darkness; so suddenly alone,

Venturing through thirteen hundred years

In hopeful search.  O'er Florence the way clears,

Gracefully beckoning Love to come home.

O Dante!  Brash young mortal unaware

Radiance divine streams from Beatrice' hair.


IV

 

(INAMORATE VIGOR II:  for Dante)

 

If this be love, then life holds naught for me,

Naught greater in all of eternity

And beyond, and before:  For Love has dwelt

More than always in our Reality --

O Real Flesh dying the death that we were dealt!

Real as the love that Magdalena felt

And treasured, instinctively and truly

Turning her trammeled heart to watch it melt.

Earth grasped love, and stumbled, rose struggling,

Visions dancing as Amour and Allah

In West and East.  Then Love returning

Gyres and bedazzles o'er a bridge.  Nova!

O!  'Round Beatrice the heavens opening

Reveal the Vita Nuov'of which I sing.

 

V

 

(But Nobody Ever Said It Would Be Easy)

 

If this be love, then life holds naught for me,

Nothing of greater Truth than its embrace;

And sweeter far than any victory

Is to be overtaken as I race,

And as I spiral through eternity,

To see shadows of heav'n in my love's face.

If this be love, why then, this is my plea:

That I may always dwell in its embrace.

If this be love, I repeat these words again:

This also is Thou; neither is this Thou.

Lifegiving as the sun, and driving rain,

Through clouds we glimpse the joy again somehow --

And turn, and live; and every pain is gain:

A scar runs proudly 'cross my lover's brow.

If this be love:  That I must give to have,

I will give all, and so my whole soul save.

Once again, thank you so much for visiting.  Come back again soon.