a poem in seven parts
					1 
convent 
my knees recall the pockets 
worn into the stone floor, 
my hands, tracing against 
the wall their original name, remember 
the cold brush of brick, and the smell 
of the brick powdery and wet 
and the light finding its way in 
through the high bars. 
and also the sisters singing 
at matins, their sweet music 
the voice of the universe at peace 
and the candles their light the light 
at the beginning of creation 
and the wonderful simplicity of prayer 
smooth along the wooden beads 
and certainly attended. 
2 
someone inside me remembers 
that my knees must be hidden away 
that my hair must be shorn 
so that vanity will not test me 
that my fingers are places of prayer 
and are holy that my body is promised 
to something more certain 
than myself 
3 
again 
born in the year of war 
on the day of perpetual help. 
come from the house 
of stillness 
through the soft gate 
of a silent mother. 
come to a betraying father. 
come to a husband who would one day 
rise and enter a holy house. 
come to wrestle with you again, 
passion, old disobedient friend, 
through the secular days and nights 
of another life. 
4 
trying to understand this life 
who did i fail, who 
did i cease to protect 
that i should wake each morning 
facing the cold north? 
perhaps there is a cart 
somewhere in history 
of children crying “sister 
save us” as she walks away. 
the woman walks into my dreams 
dragging her old habit. 
i turn from her, shivering, 
to begin another afternoon 
of rescue, rescue. 
5 
sinnerman 
horizontal one evening 
on the cold stone, 
my cross burning into 
my breast, did i dream 
through my veil 
of his fingers digging 
and is this the dream 
again, him, collarless 
over me, calling me back 
to the stones of this world 
and my own whispered 
hosanna? 
6 
karma 
the habit is heavy. 
you feel its weight 
pulling around your ankles 
for a hundred years. 
the broken vows 
hang against your breasts, 
each bead a word 
that beats you. 
even now 
to hear the words 
defend 
protect 
goodbye 
lost or 
alone 
is to be washed in sorrow. 
and in this life 
there is no retreat 
no sanctuary 
no whole abiding 
sister. 
7 
gloria mundi 
so knowing, 
what is known? 
that we carry our baggage 
in our cupped hands 
when we burst through 
the waters of our mother. 
that some are born 
and some are brought 
to the glory of this world. 
that it is more difficult 
than faith 
to serve only one calling 
one commitment 
one devotion 
in one life. 





