Mothering Sunday: a sonnet (and a sigh)

…for those who loved and laboured…

I planned to post a sonnet, but I start with a sigh. This will be a hard Sunday for so many: yet again, and a year on, we come to a Mothering sunday when many churches cannot meet and distribute the posies to parents as they have always done, and harder still, another Mothering Sunday,when many cannot even go and see their own Mothers in care homes and other places where access is restricted. For so many people are, quite rightly, staying at home when they naturally yearn to visit their mother. We know that, paradoxically, stay ing away is the most loving thing we can do, but it doesn’t feel like that.

Nevertheless we can love and be thankful and remember that our very existence in the world is testimony to the love and labour of our mothers. So once more I post my poem of thanksgiving for all parents, especialy for those who bore the fruitful pain of labour.And more particularly in this poem I have singled out for praise those heroic single parents who, for whatever reason, have found themselves bearing alone the burdens, and sharing with no-one the joys of their parenthood. They were already isolated before ‘self isolation’ was a thing, and now, with schools closed, their labour is multiplied, and without the help f neighbours. We cannot bring them physically into the church today, but in our prayers we bring them into Christ.

This poem is from my book Sounding the Seasons published by Canterbury Press and it is available on Amazon Here

I am grateful to Oliver  Neale for his thought-provoking work as a photographer, and, as always, you can hear the poem by clicking on the ‘play’ button, or on the title

Mothering Sunday

 

At last, in spite of all, a recognition,

For those who loved and laboured for so long,

Who brought us, through that labour, to fruition

To flourish in the place where we belong.

A thanks to those who stayed and did the raising,

Who buckled down and did the work of two,

Whom governments have mocked instead of praising,

Who hid their heart-break and still struggled through,

The single mothers forced onto the edge

Whose work the world has overlooked, neglected,

Invisible to wealth and privilege,

But in whose lives the kingdom is reflected.

Now into Christ our mother church we bring them,

Who shares with them the birth-pangs of His Kingdom.

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2 Comments

Filed under imagination

2 responses to “Mothering Sunday: a sonnet (and a sigh)

  1. Maggie Groves

    I have always loved this poem of yours Malcolm and I find it very poignant for me today.

    Sent from Mail for Windows 10

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