Letter To St. Catherine (Of Siena) Reposted On Her Feast Day April 29,2023 Poem by Mary Angela Douglas

Mary Angela Douglas

Mary Angela Douglas

Little Rock, Arkansas United States of America

Letter To St. Catherine (Of Siena) Reposted On Her Feast Day April 29,2023

Rating: 5.0


siena's stars look down on me.

St. Catherine-
from pitch-true tiles of pink and green
on crumbling walls in a picture book
I trace-

camelia faces of the early martyrs
torn from very light
though leaning into a wind I cannot see-
they're still - still - shining...

like a crystal that can't quite dissolve-
lean out of a crackling anguish
I cannot explain-
fix on a vision barely

out of view in
this mosaic's span
with faces kind
like home, as you remember it-

the distance widens and
I'm by myself, rehearsing no
brief candle's exit
but praying sotto voce at the

temp agencies God please get
me out of here from so
many office windows vistaless;
bring the ladder of prismatic light

and lead me out in my
robin's egg blue dress
a thin disguise but you will understand
I'm in the color of your sky-

reading the clockface wrong
and in disgrace-
but gold slips through the interstices
of cracked venetian blinds though everything

else excoriates-
and whispers that I'm not in trouble-
and there's a word I want to say
if only I knew how-

to crack the
strange veneer of this captivity:
that it's the moon washed gold to silver
through clouds good angels hold in place

for such a little while
and poppy red is a
dress for Christmas Eve that crackles like
a new bought star you can't put on yet: you're

hiding your old paint-box under 'P'
and clutching the rose-threaded book of
hours they must - not - see...
I'll see again

through white enameled rain
the rainbowed sequenced eyelash
I cannot explain
the radiance on the wall of my lost islands.

let steps on the pavement fade
and history's parchments
matter less and less than
purloined arrows bouncing off the sun-

there's nothing in the mail
when you get off the bus and run
toward a beryl glory richly rung
where once the noise of shadows

swallowed prayer
and lied: 'The King is Dead'.
let lesser kings brush by to your dismay
the rose eclat of your

lost teardrop's
coda smudged...
and the unopened envelope
stranded on the table

like a lost country.
Castaway, they're leaving
their last scar
said His decree,

on purple unruled paper-
I'll be the child
of white cathedral rains
released from school

and pearl-drenched in the end
and on the very page
a snowy word waits for me
in a poppy colored light

a nosegay,
valentine set in bloom
paper-airplane blown from God's own
curio hand and spiraling past the

campanile in the picture
at the right place in the music
so that childish classroom voices
chime out 'o-oh...! '

and doubled up in velvet of
the Princess' train and still
in love with God you're finding
all you can't explain leaning

out of the window set with jewels
who could replace-
and off to the side and smiling
barely out of view

with raspberry shrub fresh-made
on the Christmas porch
with golden chicken salad golden apple laced
on haloed toast points, lightly buttered

with wax paper greetings - marbled cake
with a scrolled and silver music still unwinding
sprung from an anguish I cannot explain,
the cherished faces wreathed in pink and green

you missed from home-

mary angela douglas 6-7,10 november 2010

COMMENTS OF THE POEM

" I'm by myself, rehearsing no brief candle's exit" life poses such strange challenges before us…. Everything excoriates right before our eyes… quite poignant….and ubdued emotiveness…

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Mary Angela Douglas

Mary Angela Douglas

Little Rock, Arkansas United States of America
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