I am reposting this Ash Wednesday Sonnet from Sounding the Seasons, with a new sense of urgency. It was ten years ago that I wrote the lines:
The forests of the world are burning now
And you make late repentance for the loss.
Since then the destruction has increased, and more recently I wrote Our Burning World, set as an Anthem by Rhiannon Randle.
So here again is the sonnet and the little introduction I wrote for it a decade ago:
As I set about the traditional task of burning the remnants of last Palm Sunday’s palm crosses in order to make the ash which would bless and sign our repentance on Ash Wednesday, I was suddenly struck by the way both the fire and the ash were signs not only of our personal mortality and our need for repentance and renewal but also signs of the wider destruction our sinfulness inflicts upon God’s world and on our fellow creatures, on the whole web of life into which God has woven us and for which He also cares. So some of those themes are visited in this sonnet, which is also found in my new book The Word in the Wilderness which contains these and other poems set out so that you can reflect on a poem a day throughout Lent. If you’d like to pursue the Lenten journey further the book is available on Amazon both here and in the USA and is also available on Kindle. But if you’d like to buy it from a proper bookshop Sarum College Bookshop here in the UK always have it in stock.
As before I am grateful to Margot Krebs Neale for the remarkable commentary on these poems which she is making through her photographs. As always you can hear the poem by clicking on the title or the Play Button
Ash Wednesday
Receive this cross of ash upon your brow,
Brought from the burning of Palm Sunday’s cross.
The forests of the world are burning now
And you make late repentance for the loss.
But all the trees of God would clap their hands
The very stones themselves would shout and sing
If you could covenant to love these lands
And recognise in Christ their Lord and king.
He sees the slow destruction of those trees,
He weeps to see the ancient places burn,
And still you make what purchases you please,
And still to dust and ashes you return.
But Hope could rise from ashes even now
Beginning with this sign upon your brow.
Pingback: Remember you are dust….. Ash Wednesday, for life. | Andrea Skevington
Dear Malcolm â your Herbert Monday night at Trinity was wonderful. I had bought the book After Prayer but Iâm sorry I couldnât wait to get you to sign it. Love to you and Maggie and thanks for the Christmas greetings
Thanks Mary
I was so pleased to see you there and was sorry I couldn’t find you when I got back to the antechapel. It’s good to be in touch again!
Dear Brother Malcolm, For some reason we couldn’t hear your reading of this intriguing poem, but my husband and I, journeying through the poems with the Rabbit Room, read it to each other.
Thank you.
Thanks. Don’t know why the reading didn’t work