“We are made for
poems,” writes professor, writer, poet, and historian Mark S. Burrows. “As children, we come to
them naturally, delighting in how words play on our tongues, whether in nursery
rhymes and lullabies or the songs we make up in the delicious hours of
daydreaming.”
But something
happens, and we think we need to outgrow those rhymes and lullabies and the
poetry that made our childhood hearts sing.
The
Paraclete Poetry Anthology 2005-2016: New and Selected Poems, edited by Burrows, seeks to restore that
loss. It assembles works from the poets published by Paraclete Press over the
past decade, and serves as post a signpost of what has been and an indication
of what is to come.
The 131 poems
from 13 poets are what can be called spiritual poems – poems about faith and
its lack, poems about Scripture, poems about faith places, poems about day-to-day
life and the meaning of life, poems about the cosmos and our place in it. The
range across the spiritual landscape, probing, exploring, defining, wondering, remembering,
and understanding.
The poets
included in the anthology are Scott Cairns, Phyllis Tickle, Paul Mariani, Anna
Kamienska, Father John-Julian, SAID, Bonnie Thurston, Greg Miller, William
Woolfitt, Rami Shapiro, Thomas Lynch, Paul Quenon, and Rainer Maria Rilke
(editor Burrows has translated poems by SAID and Rilke from the German for
publication by Paraclete). The poets represent various faith traditions but there
seems a kind of oneness here, as if these different traditions have the same
object in view.
Phyllis Tickle (1935-2015) was the
founding religion editor at Publishers Weekly, the author of more than 40
books, and for years a member of the Paraclete Press editorial board, where she
championed the publishing of poetry. This is one of her poems included in the anthology:
Old Man River by Phyllis Tickle
My father called
it
His boyhood’s
fiercest teacher.
And child-wise,
I knew
He’d once used
its even fury
As a mark to
sound his own.
My mother turned
form us
When he made
river talk.
For her, its
waters ran
With married
tears.
And long before
I’d aged enough
To want or rear
a man,
She’d willed on
me
The anger of her
years.
There’s a bridge
above it now—
Tightly built—
No different from
the land—
But it can no
more bear my sons
Across his
hunger
Then it can lift
my breath
Above her fears.
Mark S. Burrows |
Burrows is
well-equipped and experienced to serve as the anthology editor. He has translated Prayers
of a Young Poet by
Rainer Maria Rilke and 99
Psalms by Said. He’s
also co-authored several books on Christian faith, theology, and spirituality,
including Minding
the Spirit: The Study of Christian Spirituality; Faith
Can Give Us Wings: The Art of Letting Go; Biblical
Hermeneutics in Historical Perspective; and Poetic
Revelations: Word Made Flesh Made Word: The Power of the Word III. He is on the faculty at the University
of Applied Sciences, Bochum (Germany) and a historian of medieval Christianity.
His collection of poetry The
Chance of Home is
scheduled to be published this year. Burrows is also a senior editor Paraclete Press.
The Paraclete Poetry Anthology is filled with beautiful poetry and,
collectively, a sense of the wonder of the world and how we pilgrims of faith navigate
through it.
Related:
My review of Prayers of a Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke (translated by Mark
Burrows) at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
My review of 99 Psalms by Said (translated by Mark Burrows) at Tweetspeak Poetry.
2 comments:
From the time when I was a little girl, I'd listen at my Uncle Book's knee as he'd recite poetry to me. I loved every word. Your post brings that feeling of deep emotion and love as I read the words of the poem posted here. Thank you. Memories come flooding back in an instant as I recall the time spent as a child with my great Uncle, who instilled in me the heart of a poet...
Wonderful anthology! Thanks, Glynn, for the reminder to read it again.
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