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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

If I cannot repair it I beg you to repair it. (poem)


A Short Testament

Whatever harm I may have done
In all my life in all your wide creation
If I cannot repair it
I beg you to repair it,

And then there are all the wounded
The poor the deaf the lonely and the old
Whom I have roughly dismissed
As if I were not one of them.
Where I have wronged them by it
And cannot make amends
I ask you
To comfort them to overflowing,

And where there are lives I may have withered around me,
Or lives of strangers far or near
That I've destroyed in blind complicity,
And if I cannot find them
Or have no way to serve them,

Remember them. I beg you to remember them

When winter is over
And all your unimaginable promises
Burst into song on death's bare branches.


                                  --Anne Porter

12 comments:

  1. Oh thank you for this heart cry in your poem! I say yes and amen.

    Brenda

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  2. Perhaps I should wait until the tears pass to post a comment...

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  3. OH, this sooo speaks to my late contemplations for Lent! This is wonderful...thank you sooo much for sharing!

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  4. This resonates with me. Thank you.

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  5. I told the preacher a couple of Sunday's ago..."you're a good preacher, you tread on the tops and I walk on the bottoms." That's how I feel about this poem.

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  6. Oh, it causes a little dart to shoot into my heart.

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  7. Thank you for introducing me to Anne Porter. She must have been an amazing person.
    Jules

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  8. I like this so very much. Thank you.

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