Poets on St Cecilia’s day
Why is it that the odes,
The anthems, hymns, and songs
And that tale for pilgrimage, written
For November’s day, each by a man
For her, far back in sweetest history
Which would be sweet if death
Were not the highpoint.
There is but one I find
A woman with libretto
Ursula Vaughan Williams
Wife to Ralph, with her Cecilian ode
Written for another masculine
Because he asked her, Herbert Howells
And so, she wrote a word to light us,
A song for morning’s joy.
Why can’t I find another woman poet
Writing for Cecilia
A line or two reflecting
On the Trastevere girl
Who lived where men then built
Once more, a house atop that place
Where musicians once had played
As her beating heart sang
Strong that wedding day.
No Chaucer, Dryden, Alexander
Pope, nor Auden with an anthem,
No A D Hope with one more song
Hidden at that jungle point
Where Assam meets Tibet.
Let me call mine sonnet then
In unconventional mode,
Written for a woman who, if truth might tell
Loved her Valerian though they kept it secret,
And so, the fables pass on through the ages,
Hidden passion’s love
With music all their own.
Adele Ogier Jones - Writing creatively as Ogiér Jones, Adele appears in numerous anthologies including The Trawler 2020 (published by the Gloucester Poetry Society) and e-journals such as Burrow (published in Australia). She has five collections of poetry, with the latest, Following Rivers in Trees published by Ginninderra Press, Port Adelaide (2022).
Beautifully written. Rhythm strong and moving. Theme is otiose.
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