oh walk me to a boulder

oh walk me to a boulder

half-way up the mountain, covered with lichen

and damp with fog, where i can lean my back

and weep. oh my grandfathers, who walked

away from your farms and sailed west

from dark shores to save your sons from the finely-

gloved hands that would strip us of our rakes, our saws

and ploughs, that would lock swords into hands meant

to catch newborn foals and light peat fires in autumn.

oh grandfathers who made your way to these hills,

will you sit with me a moment and add your grief

to mine? i will take it. i will feel it burst from my heart

and flow into this great rock at my back, and sink

down and down into the all-remembering earth.

i was twenty one before the sight of blind injustice

knocked me to my knees and i came back to these mountains

to know my people. in the basement of the church i sat next to

my mother’s father cecil at the love feast. we ate canned fruit

in paper bowls, the women on one side and the men on the other,

and then we passed a metal basin of warm water, and one

at a time, on the bench, we washed one another’s feet – my father

galen washed mine, and the i washed cecil’s, held in my hands

the heavy feet that had walked the peach orchards on the top

of tinker mountain for decades before slipping awkwardly into

leather shoes for the treasurer’s office at the little college

in the valley. and as it was meant to be, from this gathering,

stubborn and shy like a herd of cattle that moves over the ridge

away from the road, the knowledge entered my heart that jesus

did walk this earth, and his hands knew how to touch.

and jesus went to the wilderness, and jesus rested his back

against a boulder and he wept, and jesus rose with fire

in his eyes and sent his shout into the center of the whirlwind,

and jesus felt love and compassion trickle into secret pools

and rivers under the crusted blind face of the world of men,

and jesus walked back down into the streets of the city

with his touching hands and his blazing eyes and his

grieving heart, and his shout came back around as torrents

of sweet rain, and each raindrop said, HERE I AM.

~chris weaver

i can do like jesus did,

pour love and compassion

into the deep wells of the world

so it can go deep down and water the roots of everything

and find its way up through the stalks

to the flowers opening out into the world,

and when lots of people do the same

we will again remember that

we are all part of creation

and need to take care of what we have

~eiwor

“open space in place”

long old roots

inching deep into the dark mineral body,

with each one’s shallow feeder roots

intricately tangled with everyone else’s,

all surging into the above-ground life,

the leafy top exchanging breath

with the clouds and the winged ones

~christy

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