A flurry of calendar coincidences inspire poetry. |
Note—The Old Man is slowly recovering and reducing his
pitiful whimpering. But still not up to
snuff. So I am reaching into my old bag
of tricks and pulling out another Moldy Oldie for Ash Wednesday;
For
some odd reason, calendar coincidences have often
started my poetic juices flowing. First was the coincidence of the First Sunday of Advent and World AIDS Awareness Day some years
ago. That one made it into my book We
Build Temples in the Heart. There was the time in 2005 when Rosa Parks was laid out in the Capitol Rotunda on Halloween.
Then
there was the congruence one year of
the first day of Ramadan, Rosh Hashanah, and the day before the anniversary
of September 11that resulted in a piece called If I Wore Stars on a Pointed Hat. In 2010 the Winter Solstice coincided with a Lunar eclipse. A new moon fell on the mutual birthday of Dylan Thomas and Sylvia
Plath so naturally I wrote a poem called How Black the Night. In 2011 Good
Friday ended up on Earth Day. I had
to write about that.
y
Ash Wednesday |
The thing is, this is not necessarily a good idea. Most of these events are a onetime only
or a once-in-blue-moon occurrence. So a poem honoring the occasion may have limited general appeal. Worse yet, I usually don’t become inspired until the day is upon me. That means that I have no time to send it out for placement in some prestigious venue which could time the
publication. So I end up posting the
verses here on the Blog where they
are always in danger of becoming immediately
ephemeral.
But I can’t seem to help myself. In 2012 Ash
Wednesday come around on Washington’s
Birthday.
What’s a fellow to do?
The Vestryman
Ash Wednesday/Washington’s Birthday 2012
The Vestryman performing the duty expected of the local Squire
attended chapel when
absolutely necessary
and when no good excuse
like fighting an Empire
or Fathering a Country was
handy.
He sat bolt upright on a rigid pew
contemplated
the charms of Lady Fairfax
or later
dental misery.
When came the Altar Call,
he would stand up,
turn on his
heel, and march straight out
as if a legion
was at his back.
No filthy priestly thumb
ever grimed
that noble
brow.
—Patrick Murfin
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