Everyone was disappointed that we had to cancel our annual Christmas get-together. Many thanks to the many of you who replied making the committee decision on action so much easier. Hopefully, we will all meet in 2022.
I’ve done some googling to find a blog entry for Christmas 2021. My favourite Dán Nollag is Máire Mhac an tSaoi’s Le Coinnle na nAngeal … but think that may have featured in a previous blog
So here are a few different writings I found. I’ve also included some photos I took in Russborough yesterday:
I HAVE NEWS FOR YOU
(9th century Irish Poem)
I have news for you:
The stag bells, winter snows, summer has gone
Wind high and cold, the sun low, short its course
The sea running high.
Deep red the bracken; its shape is lost;
The wild goose has raised its accustomed cry,
cold has seized the birds’ wings;
season of ice, this is my news
**************
WINTER
By Tommy Makem
WINTER, a sharp bitter day
the robin turns plump against the cold
the sun is week silver faded from gold
he is late in his coming and short in his stay
Man, beast, bird and air all purging, all cleansing,
earth already purified awaits the rite of spring
Her bridal gown a virgin snow and frosts in her hair
A snowdrop by the road today bowed gracefully
and high upon the wing up in the sparkling nothingness,
a lone bird began to sing
Can gentle spring be far away?
***********
To Know the Dark
by Wendell Berry
To go in the dark with a light is to know the light,
To know the dark, go dark. Go without sight,
and find that the dark, too, blooms and sings,
and is traveled by dark feet and dark wings.
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PRAYER FOR ADVENT
by Janet Morley (adapted)
For the darkness of waiting, of not knowing what is to come,
of staying ready and quiet and attentive, we give thanks,
for the darkness and the light are both gifts of the Spirit
For the darkness of staying silent,
for the emptiness of having nothing to say,
for the quiet recognition of needing to say nothing, we give thanks,
for the darkness and the light are both gifts of the Spirit
For the darkness of choosing to speak, to act, and to change,
even when we cannot know what we have set in motion,
but know we have to take the risk, we give thanks,
for the darkness and the light are both gifts of the Spirit.
For the darkness of hoping, wrestling, and laboring
for wholeness and justice and freedom, we give thanks,
for the darkness and the light are both gifts of the Spirit.
For the darkness of loving, in which it is safe to surrender,
to let go of our self-protection, to stop holding back our desire,
we give thanks,
for the darkness and the light are both gifts of the Spirit