Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Venus



















Venus
'Veni, vidi, vici' -
rising from sea foam,
stepping from out her shell.
Draped only in her virtue
she bears not arms -
nay - but patiently
the night of our terror.
Venus.
Herald of the conquering dawn.

Barbara Butler McCoy

[[Photo: Venus over the Atlantic;
November 27, 2010; Barbara Butler
McCoy]]

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Dia de Los Muertes













Poets and peacemakers
along the way
before me, behind me -
me in between.

No better than any, nor worse -
simply walking, begging
Your pardon for the curses,
Your indulgence for the slips.

In Your continuum I tread -
the lines, etched into my palm -
stepping with the pulse
echoing since dawn.

We will carry it through
round and round again,
generation upon generation,
until the dreaming is done.

Barbara Butler McCoy

[[Photo: Barbara Butler McCoy;
Bee foraging for pollen; zoo,
Columbia, SC; September 2008]]

Friday, July 2, 2010

May 17, 1924 - South Bend, IN



















I see her standing there
From the window by my chair
All loveliness and grace

Her face with dignity is traced
Yet soft, delicate as lace
My wish - to shield her from what may come

Wizards and Kluxers pour from the train
Coming to gather on the plain
Coming to protest her kind

The sons and daughters of Erin
They came, refugees from famine
The came to us, the free and the brave

Who resented their back-breaking labor
Blind to the practices employers favor -
Now it comes to rioting

What of this woman and her baby?
She drops to her knees and prays
I follow her gaze, and see Our Lady

Barbara Butler McCoy
(written 11.19.04)

[Photo: "Our Lady of Guadalupe," paint on tile, grotto at
St. Jude the Apostle, Atlanta, GA, 2009]

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Birthday Sonnet, the Second













In the flower of days I turn my gaze
On those fabled glories of yesteryear
Lost to me in this vale of tears and haze.
How could I hope to purchase one so dear?

And now you see me here all dressed in white
I have not hope in hell but thee, I see.
To you I lift up mine eyes full bright
And tell the world the truth that set me free.

Oh please dear one, make me thy star of one
And purge the night of all grim hopelessness.
'Tis all to me that when the battle's done
You know I stood, tireless, for blessedness.

Know I strike my standard plea toward thee:
Wilt thou this, my verse, accept it freely?

Barbara Butler McCoy

[Photo: "Dawn," Barbara Butler McCoy, 2009]

Friday, February 5, 2010

Thirsty















Following, following 'cross the wasteland
A steward who steadies with wit and staff,
Pilgrims set lonely course, buried in sand,
Hoping their no-name horse will find true path.

Marking the course with blood so red, they ford
Streams running wild, oh running wild with greed.
Such hopeful souls the dreaming pulls forward
To loving words, a face serene indeed.

Thirsty they are and, silent, they behold
St. Nick in this desert guarding a stream;
Peace and victory pouring from source untold.
Truth visible only for those who dream.

Her voice soothes the bile riled by false faces;
Stream fouled by fairness still bears Her traces.

Barbara Butler McCoy


[[Image - composite of the author's photos; slogan found painted on
the wall of an outbuilding of the Spruill Gallery, Dunwoody, GA, 2009;
Our Lady of Guadalupe, paint on tile, shrine on grounds of St. Jude
the Apostle Catholic Church, Atlanta, GA, 2009; wall, 2008; thanks to
Sean for his Photoshop tutelage!]]