Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Poem: Springtime in Eastern Maine

I don't have a new section of The Evangeliad prepared to post this week, so instead I'm sharing extracts from an old poem, lightly edited and updated (in its original form, it was a poem desperately in need of a good editor, and while still on the long end, I think this version improves it somewhat). 

Springtime in Eastern Maine

Think not on what you’d have the weather be;

        Rejoice in what it is.

But we have skies of unrelenting gray, you say!

Yet are they not blankets of life-giving dew

        O’erwrapping our rocky hideaway?—

Skies for which many a land

        Would trade their cloudless azure domes,

        Which lift the spirit for a day,

        Then render desolate what they have charmed.

But the rain is cold, you say, and miserable!

And yet cold gray rain is better matched

        With sipping tea, and playing piano,

        And writing poetry from inchoate thoughts

        Than any other weather I know.

Our spring may not be sublime, it’s true.

It’s rather more like prayer than paradise:

        Inviting us to step out and breathe deep,

        To wait in grateful patience

        Through short, infrequent glimpses

        Of the blessings yet to come;

To build up perseverant virtue

        In the crucible of time;

Learning to walk in step with what is now

        And leaning hopeward

        Toward what is yet to come.

The secret of spring is in walking slow,

        In letting our world

        Simply be herself,

        And to learn her wiser ways.

We cannot forget to speak our thanks

        To this slow and rugged corner of the earth,

And to love her for what she is

        And for what she was made to be,

Rather than asking her to be less

        Than the glory Providence grants her.

So bring on the mud and rain and gray-cast skies,

And teach me the grace,

        As Maine knows it,

        Of waking up slowly

        And breathing deep

        Before paradise returns.