Our Lady of Advent:
(A meditation poem for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception)
O Lady of the first Advent,
bright ray of violet dawn
glimpsed upon horizon’s edge,
you promise of patriarch’s prayers
and prophet’s deep dreaming,
presaged by ark and veil and temple,
we call you now,
come and make us ready!
O green bud; who heals the root
of the world’s tree you appear
as seed of Spring in the midst
of deep sin wintered darkness;
a light, a tindered spark,
arising from the dry long fruitless
wood now tender touched at last
consumed by fire,
but unburned and unburied,
appearing in the mind’s eye
of all who long for light
and feel the past ages of
our benighted vision’s yearning.
O bright Woman, born of the long line
of Eve, hidden and hoped for
in their tears and broken hearts
and in their courage that quakes
the ages of men.
You step a girl into this world
as wisdom and benediction both,
who will draw down from Heaven’s halls
the promised peace, who shatters walls and gates of the warmonger and in the grace of emptiness wakes our world soul with hope at last
of Eden’s long lost promise
while magnifying the mystery of love.
We call you!
Come and make us ready!
O Lady of the second Advent,
you will come sky mantled and star crowned,
wrapped in sun splendour and moon’s
slow silver stepping, become again the great cosmic solstice of the end,
when the dance shall cease at last
the sky shall tear and you the Holy Ark
be seen in the blue Heaven’s angeled embrace.
O come!
Make us ready for that day when you as Queen and Mother and wisdom’s spouse all
open the treasure houses of the heavens, when mercy is poured out at your prayer and we shall know ourselves your sainted subjects.
We call you!
Come and make us ready!
O Lady of this Advent’s present blessing, seen in sign and circle down the spiral of the long years appearing, present in pillared candle flame, green and berried branch
and open wreath’s enfolding emptiness;
make of us a manger, for we are straw,
our cave hearts long for light
though the mind’s inn, so filled with noise, crowded with distracted din, has too often no room for your birthing rest,
your saving stillness, your broken heart
by which you bear us all anew in blessing. Come now and enter our darkness
O wise Virgin,
O green new shoot,
O wisdom wild and dangerous,
O Queen, O woman,
O Lady of Advent,
we call you!
O come and make us ready.
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