Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Hurricane Milton embroidery posts

These mandalas, stitched in 2024, I post as Hurricane Milton increases its roar where I live in Florida.  Thankfully, I could post the below before loss of power.

My only question is, "Why Milton?"  And so I rename this powerful storm,  "Sophia."

SHE knows what she is doing.


  

STRAWBERRIES, BEES, AND LITTLE BOAS

12" diameter 

cotton threads on linen





EVE AND THE ACCEPTABLE FRUIT

AND UNION OF THE OPPOSITES




This poem written in La Calmette as a "global warming" storm impacted my hamlet in the French Pyrenees.


FROM GOSPEL OF THE CELLS

 

 

July 14, 2002

  

HerRage repressed

Could hold no more.

Detonating heavens roared.

She  flashed,

Crashing waves from above;

Madness pounding

The square of La Calmette.

Sheets of tears released,

                                                                       Funneling gullies;       

Anguish

Drenching

 The Earth’s floor.

“No more!”  She wept,

“No more

War.”

 

Shakedowns from branches

Stoned the forest path.

Winds screamed,

“Dead plums in the night!”

Breakdowns of stalks

Swept to swollen rivers.

Downpour roared,

“Corn rotted to the roots!”

All this

The torrent of HerWrath,

Her truth.

 

I heard the peasant say it in a dream,

C’est  le déluge du Nature,

Notre Terre, Notre Mère.

And in those corner rooms

Behind locked shutters,

Children huddled lost

From a lost summer.

Flickering lights from their T.V.

Speckled shadows on their faces

While night storms raged—

The bolts of Her electric madness

Swallowed shadows on the square

And children in the arms

Of their bewildered mothers

Sniffled, Maman, pourquoi?

 

We are silent.

The farmers, the students, the teachers;

The mothers; the fathers,

The leaders, the followers;

The ignorant, the wise.

Gnostics, agnostics,

The faithful, the knowing;

The poet, the madman, the thief.

We are stunned, we are silent;

Such is the pressure

Of our unacknowledged grief.

 

But yes, we know why.

Somewhere in the linings

Of our storm clouds

We know Her

The greatEarth,

The reception of our deaths and births,

The chalice of our ashes and our bones,

The breast from which food flows;

The quencher of our thirst

The glory for our eyes

The music to our ears

The reverence to our nature;

Our fear, 

The fear.

Oh Mother!

 

We shudder

In Her first light to the last

(The dawn of our resurrection

The dusk of our end)

So that we may begin again—

If only through her benevolence—

The only Mother of us all

The one Mother of us all

In whom we are born to trust.

The One we have betrayed.

 

And now Her torrential rage,

Held in HerBelly

Since her molecules were split

And before

And before

And before

Since we crucified her Myth,

Now is HerStorm

And our alarm.

 

How long has she waited for our

Confession, our amends?

Where is our shame?

Shall we repent?

Or be drowned in her unceasing rains?

The poet kneels before her Mass

A piece of dust, an ash

While roots are washed

Away from home

As HerGroans

Rumble

Like a fever

breaking

Into the lost summer of our Age

 Rumbling

On and on and on

Her  holy

holy

 rage.