For St. Kevin of Glendalough
Only after
finding the
forested place
of stillness
between
the lakes,
between
the worlds;
only after
all the words
had been
dropped,
though reverently,
like leaves,
upon
the woodland floor;
only after
the hands,
now worn,
wrinkled,
thin,
were gently opened
palm to sky;
only after
the hooded mind
was
emptied
of
all the
shadows
that seeming
are;
only after
the heart
let go the chains
of its own
forging;
only after the
breath
became the slow
foundation
of being;
then,
only then,
did the deep stillness
arise,
and the eye of prayer
open,
and the Spirit
breathe
the embers of
the long banked heart-fire
into blaze.
And then,
only then,
did the blackbird
of heaven
nest,
and lay its sky blue
blessings
of resurrection
promise
upon your
branched
hand,
anointing
with song
the promise of
heaven
for new beginnings,
while you,
tree tall
and
stone still,
beneath the
bowed benediction
of the
oaks,
became
monk,
became
sage,
became
prayer,
became
you.
.
(Today in Ireland we keep the feast of St. Kevin of Glendalough, hermit, monk and founder of the monastery of Glendalough. It was said of him that his prayer became so deep that on one occasion he was so still a blackbird mistook him for a tree and nested on his outstretched arm. He remained in stillness until the eggs hatched. This poem came to me after a visit to Glendalough some years ago. I share it every year on his feast as a reminder of the possibilities inherent in faithful prayer.
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