Friday, March 29, 2013

A Francis poem, Pope Francis & The Call That Awakens Us



Dear Family and Friends,

I got a Happy Easter phone call from my brother-in-law a few days ago, so it’s fitting that I do the same, and for additional reasons.  You see, I am currently writing about what Francis said (on this exact day) – three months and three years ago.  It was December 29, 2009. 

The poem I’m attaching feels like the most important poem yet.  But this, one of the 48 additional poems that have come since the publication of Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Poems will be published after this prose book is completed - Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Love Story.

The poem came after I transcribed audiofiles of Francis’ and my last four (of five) extraordinary dialogues.  I waited three years to listen to those recordings, made possible because Francis’ wonderful doctor, Dr. Devlin, had volunteered his recorder.  This poem provides a short overview of part of what I have been writing about (Francis’ last 100 days) since last autumn.  After that, I’ll go back to Chapter 4 which is only partly written.

Yes, during this celebration of Jesus’ Passover, it’s altogether fitting that I share with you who love him, what Francis said as he made his own Passover – and what he said about Jesus.  So here’s the poem written earlier this month:

The Last Conversations 2009                    
          I
She did not dare -
could not bear
before 
to hear his voice again.

To see,
even just his writing,     
his cursive script –         
that took a lot,
already.
 
When holding to her face                     
his worn grey sweatshirt             
she could breathe in
the sweet scent of him,             
uniquely his.                                

And the taste of him?         
Oh that - she always has,         
in poems she wrote.          
In prayer.                                            

But his voice?  
His rich and resonant voice?
She’d heard it once,                  
within her ears:               
“I love you, dear” -                     
a visitation                                           
she had called it; a miracle            
become a daily mantra
that sustains her still.    

But now to know his
real,
live
voice awaited her on audiofiles - she knew
it was time to hear his voice again
kept live through time        
these last three years.

She sat before the monitor,         
snapped on speakers,           
found the file
and paused.

It took three clicks
and there they were:
the files centered on their four
"last suppers."      

                 II
It was the week after Christmas.
Hildegard von Bingen's
Canticle of Ecstasy                          
flooded their room.
A dinner tray sat on Francis’ lap.
She offered him a bite,
then took one of her own.   
He smacked his lips
over Tuscan kale.   
                 
“Such feasts given us by friends,”
he said, then wept with her   
at the generous love                                                 
they spent on them,      
sending cards and emails for            
a last
“Message for Francis”
read aloud at dessert.                                         
“The love’s so rich,” she said,                             
it feels decadent.”                                                  
                           
He called their dinners –          
“last suppers.”
The talk turned deep,
her listening, intent.                         
“When Jesus joined in                          
our human condition,” he said,            
sharing his thoughts of
recent days,
“in a way,
we too were raised -
to that
new
level.”
She relaxed, breathing in her gratitude.         
                                        
At another last supper
he thanked her for trimming
his hair and beard
that day.                   
“Such a loving experience
we had together!”
he affirmed.
“You injected new energy
and life in me:

It’s not time yet.”

She massaged his legs and arms
as he fell asleep.           

On the day of New Year's Eve 
he wouldn't eat,                     
but then at night he changed his mind.         
 “For my sake?” she asked.
“For us,” he answered.
They were both aware:
this night could be the last          
of all the last suppers they’d held dear.         

So they embraced the little spark         
of which he spoke.
“With patience,” he suggested,
in a weak and scratchy voice,                    
“it might become something bigger.” 
      
"He had," he said,                                  
"just a very small window
I'm allowed in the world,
tonight."

But he was not bereft,                   
she was relieved
to hear him say, for he’d wrestled
with some terror –
fear of the unknown,
earlier that week -                              
“not without comfort,” he repeated,
his voice frail.

Hovering on the edge of New Year’s day –
the year into which
he would hardly step
before he left –
the music stopping time
for them that night,
was not a canticle of ecstasy     
but a virtuoso oud player’s
mesmerizing music.                                       

They reminisced.
Seven years before on his 75th birthday,
that music had filled Bella Cuchina,               
the restaurant they’d rented
to celebrate with family and friends.
The occasion, the music, had swept them         
in a transport of joy.
                                                                          
Here now alone, together they relived it.
“That music tears your heart out, doesn’t it?!”   
she said.  And he?

He began to softly sing, 
his pitch, melody
in perfect rhythm
with the master’s own.
His voice grew strong and full,
its signature resonance, once more rich.   
After a pause, before beginning again         
into sing-a-long mode, he said –
“What a melody, huh?!”
                                                
                III
Now she’d heard him
again,
heard him singing his joy with her,
on the verge of his dying,
on the brink of his death.


Francis’ faith in Jesus’ resurrection as something mysteriously bestowed upon us all is a faith I cherish as most of you do.  

I’m a member of a small community in our parish which is open to others, for discussion and monthly “Agape” prayer.  Earlier this week two articles were sent around preparatory to that meeting.   Carol Zaleski wrote both of them.  I was deeply moved by this passage from the one entitled “Immortal Dreams”: 

“There are hints in the Hebrew Bible:  ‘If a man die, shall he live again?’ asks the book of Job. ‘All the days of my service I would wait, for my release to come. Then you would call, and I should answer you; you would long for the work of your hand.’  (RSV) It is this call from our Maker and Redeemer that awakens us from death, not some inherent excellence and indestructibility in our souls.”
Here’s the link: http://www.christiancentury.org/article/2012-11/immortal-dreams  but I’ve copied the whole article below. 

Even if this doesn’t fit in with the Passover theme, our group did discuss this second article I also liked - about prayer.  In fact, this passage quoting Karl Barth moved me to tears:  “But what about foolish prayers, trivial prayers and selfish prayers? Karl Barth is comforting here. “We do not know what proper prayer is,” he admits, and it is actually a sign of our faith that we run to God in prayer with “haste and restlessness.” To do so reveals a trust that we are in communion with God, who intercedes for us with sighing too deep for words, who hears and answers prayers “quite apart from our weakness or strength, our ability or inability to pray.” In prayer, said Barth, we stand beside God as friends.” 

It’s heartwarming that our new pope called himself Pope Francis.  But even more moving to me is his actions, like yesterday’s, which our local paper reported this morning.  The headline reads:  Pope Washes Women’s Feet in Break With Church Lawhttp://news.yahoo.com/pope-washes-womens-feet-break-church-law-002454620.html
I like the last few lines of this article which is more complete online:  “Francis responded that it was to ‘help me to be humble, as a bishop should be.’ The gesture, he said, came ‘from my heart. Things from the heart don't have an explanation.’”

What is especially telling is his referring to himself often as “the bishop of Rome.”  In the early church the Pope was seen as the first of all the bishops, exercising “the Petrine ministry,” but he was still mainly “the bishop of Rome.”  It all fits the humility of St. Francis of Assisi, Francis’ patron saint. 

Just one more thing about Pope Francis.  Some of you may be aware that some people are questioning his role during “The Dirty Wars” in Argentina, specifically, some say he didn’t do enough.  (Others, on the other hand demonstrate he did what he could, even at his own risk.)  In any case, I was especially moved by the concluding paragraph of this article – “ Pope Francis: A Modern Passion Play”  By Steve Weissman, Reader Supported News  28 March 13

“Readers will decide for themselves what to make of this, but let me share my personal reaction. As an atheist and Jew - and yes, one can be both - I find scriptural arguments for and against liberation theology completely foreign. But I have long valued the political work its adherents do in poor communities. I must also confess a surprising sympathy for the new pope. I can only assume he believes in a just God who knows what he did during the Dirty War. This is the cross Pope Francis bears, and it must be terrifying, an unending crucifixion in his personal passion play. If I could only write that play as a work of fiction.”
(Info about this writer):  A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he writes on international affairs.

Joyous Easter everyone!

Love,
Elaine

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

More of the Sweet in my Bitter-Sweet Christmas – even Zenith


More of the Sweet in my Bitter-Sweet Christmas – even Zenith
                                                                                                            
Dear Family and Friends,                                                                               December 23, 2012

Christmas, like my birthday, is likely to be, for the rest of my life, bitter-sweet.  The news of Francis’ cancer came the day before the first, and during the second, he was dying.  

With the dignity of a saint, three years ago, Francis started walking to meet his death.  That didn’t preclude his also grappling with some dread, fear of the unknown which he overcame in the very admission of it.  I was privileged to witness how, with courage and surrender he did, as he told me was his task - “Let go, let God.”  Who would not want to die like that? 
So you can see how sweet this is for me to remember - even if also, bitter.  In fact, by now, it’s more sweet than bitter. 

In rereading, day by day, what I wrote then about what happened in this room, one of the 50 poems that have come since publication of Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Poems “came” today.   I experience joy, needless to say, whenever this happens.  New poems come, sometimes, from the story I’m telling in prose for the next book, Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Memoir:  A Love Story.  For example, this one was written this summer: 
Your Pleasure    If you read / what I wrote / about you, / today - / you would be pleased. / But the feeling’s / so strong, that you / are . . . / pleased, / how can I say that /  “you would . . .”?

The writing, moreover, is more than a vehicle to share Francis’ and my love story.  It helps me grow through my grief.  It took me close to a month, this fall, to work through the poem A Widow’s Way.  I was shocked to discover that I, who thought I was indeed going through rather than around my grief, had numbed myself unconsciously.  What a relief to see and feel I could now face a deeper truth.  It’s still bitter, but it’s also heartening to realize it’s only when we’re ready for more that more comes.
My journey also helps me understand, in a way I never could before, others’ grief, any and all, but especially grief at premature and unnecessary loss of life.  It’s not only the loss in Sandy Nook that should compel our sympathies, but also the loss of life in Israel-Palestine and in all war torn countries.  I pray this latest tragedy will help those who depend on guns as well as armaments to realize that war is hell and that we should do what we can to bring into our world the peace and justice which Jesus came to bring.  As the bumper sticker reads:  “Who would Jesus bomb?”

In addition to my “imperative,” writing, my life has a rhythm which I appreciate.  Weekly babysitting my goddaughter Rowan is at the head of the list.  Resuming teaching English to Africans after Sunday mass, a practice I had dropped after Francis died, is also life-giving.  Francis used to sit in on those informal, small classes.  Participating in Taize chanting in Portland is also an important weekly practice.  I am planning to return to Taize, France for a week of chanting (3 x a day) with my friend, Sue Ewing, in May.  http://www.taize.fr/en  I’m not planning to go every year as she likes to do, but I feel drawn to return with her, this, my second time.  I gain more working in the Food Pantry once a month than I give, as a volunteer. Last winter I joined the Maine Poets Society and enjoyed going to two of their three annual meetings.  It’s encouraging to see how long poetry has been promoted in Maine.  For example, this society was founded in 1936.

Sue, whose late husband Bob used to accompany her to the same CTA/USA annual national conferences Francis and I attended, makes a good travel partner.  Believe it or not, though seven years my senior, she can outwalk me!  We attended two conferences together this past year, and I went by myself to the CORPUS Conference (married priests and wives) in Texas this past June, after which I met my editor in person for the first time in his home state of Washington in the Pacific Northwest.  Then in August I drove by myself to the McGillicuddy family reunion in Woodstock, Canada. I already wrote about the Shrine we visited on Sunday in my September 7 letter to family and friends, posted on www.elaineandfrancis.blogspot.com  But I copy here the link I provided there about this Shrine which was built and dedicated to St. Francis of Assisi (Francis’ patron saint) after Francis’ great grandfather donated land to the church close to 90 years ago. http://www.ofsnational.ca/EasternCanada/skifflake.html

Praying for good health and peace of heart to all of you this Christmas and for 2013 as you follow your own Christmas star.

With loving gratitude for everyone’s support - support of all kinds,
Elaine
  
Long PS - December 24, 2012

               After completing this holiday letter last night, I remembered, this morning, a poem I struggled to write in September, when the news of Francis’ cancer shocked us.  I called the poem The Blow of the 24th, because that day – September 24, 2009 - was a bitter day indeed. 
 
               But remembering  the other 24th when Francis and I had what I called “Our Precious Dialogue” on Christmas Eve, - a Part II  for the poem “came.”  
So I renamed it Nadir and Zenith.  I want to include it with this letter (below) since it adds what would be missing without it.  Though September was my "Nadir," today is "very sweet" since it's the anniversary of my "Zenith." 

              If you make the time to read that special dialogue between Francis and me that inspired Part II, The Kiss, eight days before he died, I think you will be as re-inspired as I am too, every time I read it.  Here’s the link for it right here on this blog: 
 


       Nadir and Zenith    
                                       
 The 24th is a sacred date,
both nadir and zenith for me.    

                   I
           The Blow       
                           
 Our birthdays were joyous affairs                           
that came in September:                  
yours on the 6th – mine, the 25th.       

But my body remembers now
the shock of the 24th,
the day we learned
you soon would die.              
After just three months  
they took away your body.      

Now,
three years later,   
I’ve been forewarned:
future birthdays
may be dyed purple.

               II  
        The Kiss 

 It’s Christmas Eve, the 24th,
ten days before your death.            

A festive tray sits on your lap
on your hospice bed at home.
Like a monk, you share your thoughts -
how to face your death.

But your mien, in altered state,
includes the humor of a
saint, when you joke comparing      
a soft and a crisp
ginger cookie
brought by separate friends,
like the gourmet meal,
yet a third friend’s gift.

Shifting your mood again,
in the midst of this talk,
you surprise me.
 Looking into my eyes,
you say:
“Your presence, always,            
is deeply drawn
into my soul.”

 The 24th delivered me
an unforgettable shock – a blow.
 The second one crowned our married life
with a kiss – of the gods’.


Friday, September 7, 2012

TV Interview with me + Family Reunion + Book # 3


Dear Family and Friends,

Seven years ago Francis and I were interviewed for a TV program on Portland Community Television called “The Second Act.”  It’s a program sponsored by the Maine Senior Guide, to celebrate “the gifts and vitality of people in the second half of their lives.” 

I agreed again to be interviewed for this “Second Act” program, by myself this time, on the subject of my first book:  Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Poems. 

It’s 8 minutes long.  I’m the last of three people being interviewed during this half hour program. 
People from out of town can view it here: http://ctn5.org/shows/second-act/second-act-5358  

Local people can view it on their TV’s next week, as well - Thursdays at 11 AM on Channel 5.  It will also air randomly on Channel 2. The upcoming CH 2 airings are: 9/9   11A; 9/10  8A and 11A; 9/11  8A and 8P; 9/13  2P; 9/14 7P; 9/15 11A

The interviewer is Bill Gregory whom I described in the Acknowledgements of my book as “a retired United Church of Christ minister whom Francis chose to help him ‘with the transition’ and who has given me trusted guidance and support since Francis’ death.”  (By the way, Bill wonders if it’s the camera that made me look more frail than he said I am and look in person.  ;o) 

Interestingly, the radio interview, aired in February, 2011, was also 8 minutes long:  http://soundcloud.com/carolynbarnwell/sing-and-i-will-hear-you   

Last month I went to Woodstock, NB Canada for our annual McGillicuddy family gathering on “Shrine Sunday” at Skiff Lake, NB.  It’s Francis’ great great grandfather Daniel, emigrated from Ireland, who donated part of the family’s property to the church for this Shrine to St. Francis of Assisi (Francis’ patron saint) to be built 89 years ago.  This annual pilgrimage to the Shrine has taken place ever since.  You can see a photo of it here:  http://www.ofsnational.ca/EasternCanada/skifflake.html

Since the following poem which came from that weekend experience doesn’t include everything, I want to mention my joy in being reunited with Francis’ family, nieces and nephews and in-laws, and especially Jo, my sister-in-law, newly widowed. 

I was also delighted by the rare appearance there of Paul McGillicuddy, the 98 (or is it 99?) year old relative who gave Francis his first job in the US before he went to college.  I told Paul, sitting next to me the whole time on the grassy incline during the liturgy – that he had made my day.  Thanks to cousins Barbara and Frank Bolton who brought him.

But here’s the poem (probably revised sufficiently for now) that came from that weekend experience:

Family Reunion                            August 11, 2012

As I round the bend at        
at the Woodstock Exit,
arriving alone
for our family reunion         
(it’s the town where my in-laws
went to school)
I’m flooded with my late             !          
husband’s feelings -
never before like this –
his own feelings in me.

Summer after summer
we came to this together.
But for many springs too,
he came alone.
He did it, he said,
“to commune
with the ancestors.”

He’s one of them now.

They were six siblings    
when I met him.
Only three remain,                     
none of them him . . . and
their spouses are gone –          
all but one
other,
and I.                                  

The five of us gather                        
(it's my hotel room)
plus a nephew and a niece. 

When the eldest
tells stories,
his face animates the past.
I see him nudge his sister:
“You and I, Josephine,” he says,
“are the only ones left
who remember these things.”

My in-laws,
being kin of Francis,        
grace me with
their smiles and manners -
a touch of him.                  

By now Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Memoir:  A Love Story is coming along so well I told my editor (another Irishman - Mike O’Connor) that words and ideas are falling like rain, not only in the  chapter 4 I’m working on now, but for future chapters.  And yesterday, even a possible closing sentence for the whole of this book # 2 presented itself.

The writing is giving me such joy I can feel Francis’ pleasure.  In fact, after writing about him at Camp Pesquasawasis, this poem came:


Your Pleasure                            August 18, 2012

If you read
what I wrote
about you,
today -
you would be pleased.

But the feeling’s
so strong, that you
are . . .
pleased,
how can I say that
“you would . . .”?


Book # 3 is therefore already on its way since the thirty poems that have come and will come, God willing/inshallah, after the publication of the first one, will comprise half of it.  The name of that third book, I like to repeat, is:  Sing to Me and I Will Hear You – The Uncollected Poems and Journals.

Loving Gratitude,
and Prayer for justice and peace for all people
and for our planet,

Elaine

PS:  I love to hear from outside the glass door near which I’m sitting, my six chickens’ contented clucks.