(Wendy Cabell, August 28, 2024, feast day of the Dormition of the Mother of God (old calendar), (above) Our Lady of Kiev, Saint Anna the Prophetess, Saint Agnes of Cologne (companion to Saint Ursula), Saint Junipero Serra, Saint Augustine of Hippo, Saint Joaquina Vedruna Vidal de Mas, Several Martyrs in England and in the Spanish Civil War, Saints Theodora and her daughter Theopiste, Martyr Susanna, Queen of Georgia. On Jewish calendar today is Hasmonean Holiday (circa 100 BCE) (Hellanist secular law replaced). Image from here.)
On Unitive Force
Love grows, generates [plant soul].
Love senses, enjoys [animal soul].
Love transcends, understands [human soul].
Love moves all things…
–adapted from minervawisdom.com,
“Aquinas on the Levels of the Soul”
1. The Maize’s Tale Up, out -- blade, ear, grain. Love Herself tends, brings map: one pure and magic Land. And our seed, so vale-familiar finds! a Heart Who understands, finds! a Heart Who understands. 2. The Lioness’ Tale She spots movement across the plains, soft blink of a golden eye. Neighbor’s cub it turns out. The lioness turns towards. There'll be jubilation, no doubt, upon the little one’s return –- to the warm and welcoming fur of her Mother, to the warm and welcoming fur of her Mother. 3. The Author’s Tale (Portland, Oregon, 2006) Once volcano, we hike mount’s rim. A hawk circles. Draws us in. Onto library, spot ancient lore grants us passage, most kindly Shore grants us passage, most kindly Shore –-
*From prompt: Write of something longed for, past, present, or future. Daisy Barrett-Nash’s Legacy Lines (Writers at Play), August 28, 2024. As material, reworked past pieces prompted by Marguerite Antonia Radclyffe Hall :
1) free association based on various words given as prompts (later set to structure inspired by Marguerite Antonia Radclyffe Hall) , and 2&3) freewrite then structure as inspired by (respectively) Hall’s “Tramping Poem” (with an eye to using the comfort of rhyme scheme to make the expression of charged issues easier for readers to receive), and “Tradition” (with an eye to how one spends, has spent, or would like to spend their Sundays). From Daisy Barrett-Nash’s Legacy Lines (Writers at Play), Summer, 2024.
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