For the day that's in it, a little poem I wrote two years ago:
Ash Wednesday
The priest rubs ashes on my headAnd tells me to repent.
My sins are very far from dead,
My lusts are far from spent.
That ancient bonfire burns apace,
That blaze of sin and lust.
God send me hotter flames of grace
Before I fall to dust.
Today is also Valentine's Day. Here's a little poem taken from the novel Weaveworld by Clive Barker, which I think is very appropriate to today's double-bill, and is a pretty good poem. I hope Barker's people won't come after me for copyright violation, especially since it's freely available elsewhere on the 'net.
One part of love is innocence
One part of love is guilt
One part the milk, that in a sense
Is soured as soon as spilt
One part of love is sentiment
One part of love is lust
One part is the presentiment
Of our return to dust.
And, since that's all very grim, here's something that made me laugh yesterday. The full title of a joke-book from 1771, which I came across on my library's online catalogue:
A wholesome trio! Thank you. Your Ash Wednesday quatrains have a pleasing dash of Chesterton.
ReplyDeleteOne I've seen today:
'Roses are red,
The colour of rust;
Remember, O man,
That thou art dust.'
I like that a lot!
DeleteAnd thank you for the kind words!