Authors: Jane Yolen
Our goal in bringing out poetry in fully reflowable digital editions is to honor the sanctity of line and stanza as meticulously as possibleâto allow readers to feel assured that the way the lines appear on the screen is an accurate embodiment of the way the author wants the lines to sound. Ever since poems began to be written down, the manner in which they ought to be written down has seemed equivocal; ambiguities have always resulted. By taking advantage of the technologies available in our time, our goal is to deliver the most satisfying reading experience possible.
Prayer
Angel of lost spectacles
and hens' teeth,
angel of snow's breath
and the insomnia
of cats, angel
of snapshots fading
to infinity,
don't drop meâ
shoeless,
wingless.
Defender of burrows,
carry meâ
carry me
in your pocket of light.
â
NANCY WILLARD
Pistis Sophia: A Dispatch
She took the twisting serpent in hand,
its tail twined around her arm;
pumping mighty wings she flew
along the trails of sky.
The garden was still except for the two
down by the river, naming the reeds.
She dropped the serpent by the apple tree,
then, following celestial orders,
flew back across the infinite blue.
Reports of strife on the back streets
and strikes by cherubim
occupied her long past the Fall.
In the Springâshe heardâ
the two were served a sharp, swift eviction.
By then all Heaven was in an uproar,
so what did the Earth matter?
â
JANE YOLEN
The garden was still except for the two/down by the river, naming the reeds.
â
Jane Yolen
Angel among the Herbs
Angelica archangelica
,
herb of the archangel Michael
on whose feast day you bloom,
you are not beautiful.
It is said that a monk
fell asleep and saw you,
tall, gawky,
singular as celery,
peering over the rose's shoulder,
the lily's cradle,
and woke singing
your praises.
You strengthen the heart,
unbind the lungs,
untrouble the stomach,
blow out bad spirits.
Let the juice of angelica
fall on deaf ears.
They will hear
the heartbeats of angels
and the dead coming back
in your roots
calling our names
in your green tongue.
â
NANCY WILLARD
An Angel Considers the Naming of Meat
Whatever this was, with its arms and skirt,
crowned and winged and all-seeing,
it was no mere grazer.
Crown roast
,
butterfly chop, arm pot roast, skirt steak
,
eye round
. And what's left
is large and curious as a fallen tree,
split open, a breached tomb of roseate marble.
Seven ribs stand up in a sea of fat.
Like rowers they lean into the wind.
Once they rocked as one, in out, in out,
pushed by the breath of the living beast.
Now there is stillness
on the butcher's board, faintly hollowed
by the flesh of animals fallen under the knife
year after year. How can he bear it?
On his fluted rack hang hooks, poles,
a scraper for scrubbing the rough nap
off flesh ripped by the blade,
and a cleaver nipped from a halo of steel.
The electric slicer buzzes and whines,
but the plucked pullets sleep, curled up
in their chilly incubator,
their wings hugging their sides,
dreamless, having lost their heads.
If they had thumbs, they would be sucking them.
Famished, foolish, I am overcome with grief.
The butcher unhooks a sausage, cuts it,
hands me a wafer studded with precious meats.
“You're my first customer. This one's on me.”
â
NANCY WILLARD
Every visible thing in this world is put under the charge of an angel.
â
St. Augustine
Every Visible Thing
Asparagus I can believe,
in its first green thrust;
McIntosh apples, tart on the bough;
cardinals like a blot on winter's clean page;
raging crows on cropped fields.
Inching caterpillars I can believe,
fuzzy footed on a leafy spine;
trout rising at dusk,
shedding watered light;
willows weighted over with ice;
even the black snake winding
through the startled grass.
But what angel, totting eternities of
poison ivy,
snail darters,
brussels sprouts,
could have time or will for exaltations?
â
JANE YOLEN
Angels in Winter
Mercy is whiter than laundry,
great baskets of it, piled like snowmen.
In the cellar I fold and sort and watch
through a squint in the dirty window
the plain bright snow.
Unlike the earth, snow is neuter.
Unlike the moon, it stays.
It falls, not from grace, but a silence
which nourishes crystals.
My son catches them on his tongue.
Whatever I try to hold perishes.
My son and I lie down in white pastures
of snow and flap like the last survivors
of a species that couldn't adapt to the air.
Jumping free, we look back at
angels, blurred fossils of majesty and justice
from the time when a ladder of angels
joined the house of the snow
to the houses of those whom it covered
with a dangerous blanket or a healing sleep.
As I lift my body from the angel's,
I remember the mad preacher of Indiana
who chose for the site of his kingdom
the footprint of an angel and named the place
New Harmony. Nothing of it survives.
The angels do not look back
to see how their passing changes the earth,
the way I do, watching the snow,
and the waffles our boots print on its unleavened face,
and the nervous alphabet of the pheasant's feet,
and the five-petaled footprint of the cat,
and the shape of snowshoes, white and expensive as tennis,
and the deep ribbons tied and untied by sleds.
I remember the millions who left the earth;
it holds no trace of them
as it holds of us, tracking through snow,
so tame and defenseless
even the air could kill us.
â
NANCY WILLARD
Angel in Summer: West Virginia
Forgiveness is water over stone,
twenty-one rocks till it is pure.
In my husband's home county
a river falls past strip mines,
over humpbacked boulders,
then is clear enough for trout.
I have eaten those rainbows,
small bones removed,
silver scales browned in butter,
startled eyes popped out.
Each time I ask forgiveness.
We are not afraid of the mountains,
riddled with rattlers.
An angel guides us through the passes,
along the switchbacks.
He looks like my dead father-in-law,
like a Viennese undertaker,
round-faced, small mustache.
He leaves no tracks.
While we fish the pools
he sits, melancholic on the shore;
there is no joy of heaven on his face,
his death too recent for absolution.
He smiles once, sadly, at a strike.
Each cast is a prayer.
â
JANE YOLEN
The Mission of the Puffball
Unlike my brain, it was smooth
and white as that dead foam
they pack around porcelain
shipped from far ports.
Fat angel,
pocked like a wiffleball;
a racquet could send it spinning
into the trees,
but I did not harm it
because I never met
a guest so content
as that sly loaf rising
under the dark leaves
of the hosta,
ripening like cheese,
drawing from darkness
the alien moon of its flesh.
Ferns packing up for the winter
willingly left their shadows
with an angel sent to bare
God's inscrutable light:
in the name of the snow
and my white bowl of darkness
,
do as the air tells you
.
â
NANCY WILLARD
Names
The cherubs at the manger
have no names.
Anonymous,
they hang from the rafters,
singing out only
God's own.
I will call this one
Hosannah,
and that one
Hark,
and the little one
by the window,
wings ruffling
in the winter wind,
I shall call
Collie,
for, like a dog
rounding up sheep,
it was he chevied
poor shepherds on the hill,
driving them down
through narrowing streets
into the waiting fold.
â
JANE YOLEN
A Carol for the Shepherds
An angel woke three shepherds
with timbrel, harp, and drum.
“The morning stars are singing,
the planets dance and hum.
So take yourselves to Bethlehem.
The Prince of Peace has come.”
The sheep scattered behind them.
The crags were dark and wide.
“The wolves will surely find them.
We will not leave their side
for all the babes in Bethlehem,”
the frightened shepherds cried.
The angel sang, “O Morning Bright”
and from his sleeve let fall
a hundred stars, and by their light
the frightened shepherds saw
the wolf that watched their flocks by night
was caring for them all.
“Tonight the rivers sing for joy,
the very stones have tongues,
the lion and the lamb lie down,
the moon marries the sun.
So take yourselves to Bethlehem.
The Prince of Peace has come.”
â
NANCY WILLARD
An Angel Tells the Birds to Gather for the Great Supper of God
Robins and meadowlarks,
and the horned owls, who tune
their talons to the dark;
herons and doves and loons;
birds molting like the moon,
who turns her speckled face
on fields of empty space;
blackbirds whose polished wings
God nicked with holy fire;
and birds with names not heard
on any singer's mouthâ
fly to the feast,
from north and south,
from west and east.
â
NANCY WILLARD
Dancing with Angels
I am flat-footed, left-footed,
my heel narrower than my toes.
Slippery surfaces defeat me.
When I was younger
my
port de bras
carried me
through the lower grades.
Mr. B. smiled on me,
so like a god.
I danced with angels,
their wild wings in fourth position,
our toe shoes
slip-slip-slapping
on the heads of pins.
â
JANE YOLEN
Aunt Fanny
They were introduced, Mother said,
by a holy angel,
so what she was wearing a
shmata
on her gray hair,
three black hairs protruding
from her chin.
She sucked lemons at night,
the room smelling like air freshener,
and she snored, a regular little engine.
Her shoes were always broken-downâ
bunions, Mother said.
She made applesauce the old way,
from sour apples, could curl your tongue up.
At weddings she danced by herself,
all in a circle, clockwise;
at funerals she wept holding
the hands of other mourners.
She made a
shidekh
, it stuck, though,
so all the rest was forgiven.
Matchmakers are allowed
their little peculiarities,
like angels their wings, their halos.
â
JANE YOLEN
Harpo and the Angel
The manager gave me a harp
who cried on my shoulder,
the left one, as I hunted and picked,
pondered and plucked.
She wanted to be a tree again,
to sing in a thousand tongues,
leaves tilting in the wind.
Now in the dark theater
she went speechless with grief
and showed me the syntax of silence,
its flowers and perfumes,
its chasms of light.
I was her silent brother,
even on Broadway. After one year
I could play “Annie Laurie.”
When the crowd cried
encore
I played it again.
Halfway home, I lost myself
in the crammed windows
of F. W. Woolworth and his
framed pictures, so cheap
even I could afford
the Grand Canyon,
a clipper at full sail,
my own face in the glass,
everything washed in heavenly light,
and nothing with a right to it, except
an angel in the middle,
as comfortable on her cloud
as if she were waiting for the bus
and to make the time go faster
playing her harp, which she leaned
against her right shoulder,
showing me how to hold my harp,