Having a baby in the house gets to feel perfectly, comfortingly normal after a week. Babies always keep me focused on the fundamental things, like laughing and kissing and playing lap games with a little person just starting out in the world.
The way they give their full attention to their work, whether it is a game of throwing a cork and chasing it, or eating breakfast, is inspiring. Their thoughts are not always wandering to the other work waiting to be done, or Does Johnny like me? and other such distractions.
Raj and his parents have returned to the other side of the globe. Our last few days, which were quieter after all the fun aunts and uncles and cousins had gone, provided more opportunity for the two of us to wander about the garden between showers, to examine sunflower seeds and olives and salvia flowers; and for Raj to eat peanut butter for the first and second times.
We all went to the coast and listened to the waves crashing on the sand, and felt the fresh and rain-softened air. This morning of Kate and Tom and Raj’s departure, I came to consciousness with the sound of rain lending an unusual clarity — and when it’s heavy enough to hear, that means it’s enough to really soak in and bless the earth. It’s the best way I know to wake up.
I’ve been wanting to post this poem, and now seems right, even though it is a somewhat melancholy reflection. The seeds of heaven the poet feels are a comforting connection to those he is separated from, and a distillation of pain into something so nourishing, only God could have accomplished it.
AUTUMN RAIN
The plane leaves
fall black and wet
on the lawn;
the cloud sheaves
in heaven’s fields set
droop and are drawn
in falling seeds of rain;
the seed of heaven
on my face
falling — I hear again
like echoes even
that softly pace
heaven’s muffled floor,
the winds that tread
out all the grain
of tears, the store
harvested
in the sheaves of pain
caught up aloft:
the sheaves of dead
men that are slain
now winnowed soft
on the floor of heaven;
manna invisible
of all the pain
here to us given;
finely divisible
falling as rain.
-D.H. Lawrence
There is something so nice about having a baby in the house. I realize all of my problems disappear when there is a baby to hold.
I love this post Gretchen. The poem is so poignant.
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We had our 3 year old and 10 month old granddaughters here for a week at Thanksgiving. It is so sweet. Unfortunately, the baby is at that stage where only her mother can hold her, but she is very friendly otherwise.
AMDG
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All other cares are laid aside when a baby is present for me. I love the photo by the olives growing. What an ideal day, at the shore listening to the waves!
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That’s a beautiful poem, but sad, as you say. But what an image! What a threshing floor in heaven.
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GJ — you’ve somehow transferred an error into the Lawrence poem. The line, “Read more” isn’t there, in his poem. I wondered about it — it breaks the form, and it doesn’t really make sense. Just thought you’d like to know.
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Thank you so much!!
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