Sunday, 18 February 2024

Four Poems by Nancy Tinnell

 



oathing stone


I kneel to rest my hand upon this stone

from below it the earth pulses and pulls

offering to me an awareness of yesterday

a sense of belonging to those I cannot know

the ones who would never know me

other than through their confidence

that the stones of their land

would always mark its borders

and remain for those who follow

I cup my hand over the stone

just as they did when making their vows

swearing loyalty by the constancy of place

and the certainty of bloodlines

the stone is warm and dry in the sun’s heat

today my hand absorbs this warmth

while they who once set it in place

feel only the coolness of their eternal rest

on the other side of the oathing stone

 

 

poet review

            for Thomas Lynch and Christine Valters Paintner

 

an odd event, this dialogue between poets

but I sat with pen in hand, wanting to glean from

The Wisdom of Wild Grace and to offer

understanding for The Sin-Eater: a Breviary

these seemingly disparate and distanced works

 

words are her brush and canvas, used to create

provocative works of beauty: a vine-laden forest

thick with leaf on paths trod by saints

here she traces their steps, finds their markers

and contemplates the significance of their message

 

his thoughts, though fresh from his pen,

are like ancient quarried stones bearing scars

and carvings from incessant rains,

hinting at the dark secrets of the bog

disclosing a sin-eater in his private dwelling

 

the greyness of the sin-eater’s grim reality

juxtaposed with her colourful word-portraits

of saints in the wild is oddly exquisite

an unlikely pairing yet the conversation is rich

full of parallels and congruencies

 

with her reverent recounting of their hagiographies

she suggests the peace felt by the saints

as they lingered in the mossy wood

while he tells of the sin-eater’s struggle to find peace

through momentary lapses into cleanliness and rare laughter

 

homage to the poets who help us to see

the full spectrum of a meaningful life

the universality underlying all things

the beauty of flower-lined forest paths

the magnificence of grey stones carved by the rain

 

 

some poems


some poems are gauze wrapped gently around a life

assuming all secrets will be hidden from sight

a weave of words to bind a wound

and offer healing or clarity

some poems are gauze wrapped gently

how open the weave, how obvious the heart 

 

 

luminescent


luminescent we were

froth of seafoam

in our laughter

dainty lace peeking from cuffs

welcoming

always welcoming

smiles and kisses

lingering touch

foxfire

foxfire we were

glow after dark

light in the wine

mystery promise

lady’s slipper dripping dew

enchanter’s nightshade

fire pinks

fire pinks we were

and luminescent





Nancy Tinnell lives and writes in Louisville, KY. She has published two chapbooks: murmurs (2020), followed by the sum of all my parts in 2023. She enjoys reading poetry aloud and has organized several events of readings and music, such as Irish Poets and Celtic Saints, The Ragamuffin Readings: a Tribute to Brennan Manning, and Uncommon Attitudes. Her poem Nell’s house was shortlisted in the spring 2023 poetry contest sponsored by The Poetry Kit (United Kingdom). When she is not writing, you may find her in the kitchen, experimenting with new recipes.


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