Some Poems in Latter Days ========================= Exported from Holy-Writings.com on 2026-06-18 1 clipping 1. Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Jack McLean, Some Poems in Latter Days, bahai-library.com. ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── SOME POEMS IN LATTER DAYS J.A. McLean 2022 Contents Contents .......................................................................................................................................... i Foreword ....................................................................................................................................... iii Dominick Browne Lord Mereworth ............................................................................................... 1 After the Snowstorm 2019 ............................................................................................................. 2 Snowstorm 2019 ............................................................................................................................ 3 Fake Flowers .................................................................................................................................. 4 August Stillness .............................................................................................................................. 5 Phyllis in the Present Tense Dr. Phyllis Perrakis, d. March 10, 2018) ............................................ 7 The World is a Remembering and Forgetting ................................................................................ 9 The Part the Whole ...................................................................................................................... 11 The McLeans of Duart and Elsewhere.......................................................................................... 12 The Consolations of Aging ............................................................................................................ 14 Life After Life ................................................................................................................................ 15 Nine Tercets: Naw Ruz 176 (home because of illness) ............................................................... 16 Toronto Then ............................................................................................................................... 17 Night Sounds in Lambasa, Fiji ....................................................................................................... 19 Meditation on Time and Grace in Latter Days ............................................................................. 21 A Man Named John (John Rager, Miraris Amicum) ..................................................................... 23 Udo in Signs and Tokens (1926-2019) (Scholar, lawyer, music lover) ......................................... 24 Meditation on an Egyptian Alabaster Vase .................................................................................. 26 Bank and Hopewell ...................................................................................................................... 27 Hidden Treasure ........................................................................................................................... 28 Why Now? .................................................................................................................................... 29 They Do Not Know ....................................................................................................................... 30 The Village Nuptials...................................................................................................................... 31 When the Rains of September ..................................................................................................... 32 I am a Seeker Seeking Seekers ..................................................................................................... 33 Covid-19 Moment Easy ................................................................................................................ 34 i The Wedding in St. Patrick’s Church (to N.H.T.) ......................................................................... 36 In Sleep’s Shadows ....................................................................................................................... 38 Fragments on the Wing ................................................................................................................ 39 Kafka Sitting on a Cloud ............................................................................................................... 41 How We Die ................................................................................................................................. 42 Arabica ......................................................................................................................................... 43 Moira’s Promise ........................................................................................................................... 44 No Bird Song This November 9th .................................................................................................. 45 The Short of It .............................................................................................................................. 46 The Passing of JD .......................................................................................................................... 47 Just like a Child ............................................................................................................................. 48 Snowflakes and Gardens .............................................................................................................. 49 Happy New Year 2021 .................................................................................................................. 51 A Poem is a Metaphysical Thing ................................................................................................... 52 The Valley of Content ................................................................................................................... 54 The Last Vestiges of Winter ......................................................................................................... 55 Covid Dialog with Self in a Day in the Life .................................................................................... 57 The Rescue ................................................................................................................................... 60 Father Before the Mirror.............................................................................................................. 61 Truth Be Told ................................................................................................................................ 62 Brent John Duchesne (1952-2022) ............................................................................................... 63 The Parting (for Sylvie) ................................................................................................................ 65 Phoebe Anne Lemmon (1928-2019) ............................................................................................ 67 Awakening .................................................................................................................................... 69 ii Foreword The first poem in this collection recalls meeting Dominick Browne, Lord Mereworth, in London. As near as I can recall, that meeting took place in 2009. That meeting happened already 13 years ago, when I was 64 years old. (At this writing, I am now in my 78th year). These poems typically follow a pattern that appeared in my verse years ago. Here are descriptive poems, poems arising from incidents in everyday life, eulogies to friends who have passed on, and others still living, a great variety of “metaphysical” poems inspired by the spiritual quest, and the many faces of love—to name some of the more prominent themes. Most of my poems have a reflective, often passive quality—but by no means uniformly— simply because my poetry is written in a state of deep reflection, when I attempt to capture in words the intensification of an experience that is rendered by a poem. While the experience itself may be singularly inspiring, capturing the experience in verse becomes an expression of the experience itself. This thought may sound like a truism, but it means, in other words, that poetry becomes, in Marshall McLuhan’s phrase, not only the medium but also the message. Without the poem, there can be no experience that can be more widely shared with others. These experiences can of course be rendered in prose, but the poem captures an economy of intense experience that cannot as easily be rendered in prose. I have written other volumes of poetry that do not yet appear at my website www.jack- mclean.com. Hopefully, I can manage, despite the vicissitudes dealt to the mind and body in one’s senior years, to post these poems with the much appreciated help of my friend and electronic wizard, Jonah Winters. J.A. McLean, Ottawa, December 8, 2022 iii Some Poems in Latter Days Dominick Browne Lord Mereworth (Remembering our visit in London) Dominick is a cool dude, a prince of a man who is never rude. He dresses for dinner, and wears his tie to look his best, Bahá’u’lláh’s man among the noblesse. He calls the thing just as he means, spot on with teaching, but never with preaching. Lord and commoner all at once, just the sort of man you would invite to lunch. He and I are bosom pals, closest chums by association, one of the finest Bahá’ís in all the nation. Dominick and I are friends for life, in perfect harmony sans trace of strife, a fountain of friendship ever flowing, in a heart of love that is ever glowing. Jack McLean After the Snowstorm 2019 The squirrels, those rats with tails, run along the powerlines, among the cypress trees, leap from branch to snowy branch, as if it’s a summer’s day. Some Poems in Latter Days Snowstorm 2019 It could be a giant snowman resting on his side, or a reclining Buddha lying on my patio, the frosty hills and valleys of Switzerland. The Buddha’s silent voice seems to whisper: ‘Ah rest weary traveller. Here is peace for the thorn in your side. Look in wonder how my Hand has covered the land!’ Jack McLean Fake Flowers I’ve given in to fake flowers. At age 73 I’ve excused myself in a concession to convenience. The form, the colour are there, but there is no fragrance. They are never thirsty. But how can they be flowers if I dust them, rinse them every few months? Jim Desson approached to inhale their perfume. Sorry Jim to have deceived you, your innocent expectation dashed. But how can they be flowers? There is no fragrance…. Some Poems in Latter Days August Stillness Stillness in the soul, not in the shade, is outside now, in the dying days of August, before the patchwork quilt of Autumn’s changing colours, is slowly stitched upon these ancient hills. Supreme stillness is hushed overall, in an even—ing, a level—ing, like the calm of Indian Summer returning in late October, hot not burning, when the wine-press that yields the drunken sweet liqueur, purple teardrops that gather the fruit of summer, looks back on its glory days, basks in its warmth. Now all things are weighed in the balance, but not found wanting, measured out, scaled in equal proportions, peace dispensed despite… Peace that will out, peace imposed by an unseen Hand or no hand, the Hand of Spirit or, the hand of the intrinsic condition. The red cardinal’s song penetrates the air, my eyes solaced as he flies, from branch to branch on the honey locust tree, the whistle high and human-like in tonic tones of strident clarity. Jack McLean Whistle like a bird to call him, whistle like a bird to say: “I can speak like you little redbird.” This stillness in and out, a tiny miracle that saves from chaos and destruction, the stench of pervasive sickness and death, our daily bread on this sorry planet, erased from memory in a golden moment as we cup to our lips a global goblet, that works the bliss of forgetfulness, if only for this passing hour… Some Poems in Latter Days Phyllis in the Present Tense (Dr. Phyllis Perrakis, d. March 10, 2018) She leads us through forests, flowers, by paths and streams, imagines us as shining leaves on one great tree, bound each to each, as is root to trunk, as bud to bloom. She knows that in these forests, flowers, paths and streams, we find ourselves reflected, as in the more perfect mirror of our forms and faces, entranced by the glancing beauty, the grace, the symmetry, the majestic circle in this whirling, cosmic dance, danced by dancers in trailing robes of purple, musical arrangement, but not just yet la symphonie magnifique because we can’t quite hear the music. We watch with her through long years of patience, the desire of her heart denied, when on a sudden sunrise, her countenance radiates again, the key turns in the lock, she escapes the room that held her close, the easy laughter bubbles up again. We watch with her a half-a-time, when troubles come she works magnificent patience, complaining never, her soul borne up on the ascending wings of prayer by those who love her, the whispered entreaties to make her whole again. Jack McLean And between times and before times, the scholar’s ink flows, scripting belles lettres, with sound and sense that seeks to fathom the obdurate mystery of a broken humanity, the crooked and the straight of the wily human heart. She knows that it can be healed with just the power of a magic Word, when mankind’s shattered soul will yield to Love Herself and let hungry mouths be fed on cakes of mercy. We follow close behind her, the weary hearts that long to follow, she, honoured on this pilgrimage, to reach the sacred precincts, the holy of holies, while others still tread a stony path. These dark hours will be dispelled by the eternal sun, splendid in the glory of its spreading rays, that will light the path leading to her own, where she will sing a song celestial. Some Poems in Latter Days The World is a Remembering and Forgetting The world is a remembering and forgetting, or, when learning the most difficult of things: living in the Golden of Now. If regret marks losses, the past brings nostalgia in its wake, like furrowed ground that yields dry rocks and stinging nettles, under the ploughman’s cutting edge as he passes on his way. Or, the world is aglow with sweet content to read again the silver script of bygone chapters writ, when we forget the plenteous pain that stalks us in its need to feed. That body we do well to starve! Joy is man’s lot, his birthright. The hidden world beyond, the ether of the higher realms, bestows joy only, the Master says. Its happy beams come down and through, if our crystal glass be pure and true. Sorrow, sadness, shadow never enter this hallowèd ground. These strangers have no right to pass, no watchword can they speak, no sentinel confuse, nor power to persuade, no more than one lone warrior penetrates the castle wall, frenzied swordsman though he be, to strike wild blows Jack McLean at empty air; no more than the blind hold a flickering flame to the fiery sun. The joy we seek lies in what we are, inscribed within the finest strands of soul and sinew, as close as blood, bone and beating heart within our breast, in our breath, our very being. These laurels can be worn a crown, but only in odd hours of our passing days. In ages even, in time out of time, when every day is Spring, we drink at the fountain of eternal youth. Some Poems in Latter Days The Part the Whole We collect memories not mere, but many, necessary fragments to make us smile, recoil, regret, embrace, while the bird of time is on the wing, collect then recollect. Time flies said the Romans, --tempus fugit--, but it was said so long ago. Birds had wings as they do now, but no airplanes, missiles, laser beams, speed of light did not measure time, the bird not so swift as one of these. A seigneur must recollect all these fragments in long, slow hours, both savory and sweet, --and the sour, the life of: where we’ve been, what done, left undone, who we’ve loved, thought we loved. This life has almost spent the part, but then the whole to come, when awakening to the brightest dream, the past regrets shall be no more. In the there of nowhere and everywhere, only awake to the Bliss of Forever, the Golden of Now, Glorious Reunion of all Souls, renounce the part, embrace the Whole. Jack McLean The McLeans of Duart and Elsewhere (meditation on a dual-identity) Gillean means “Servant of St. John.” Gillean of the Battle-Axe, ancestor of the clan, was borne by his máthair late in the Middle-Ages. He became the overman. No royal named me Knight of the Thistle, but I did grow down on my cheek, before the beardie came; nor was I made Laird of the Western Isles. This McLean of Mull had no pull! Colonel Sir Fitzroy Maclean, 26th chief of the clan, with the fortune he made, restored Duart Castle in 1912, for centuries long left to degrade, there on the rock where eagles fly, high in the sky, over the isle of Mull. But I will settle for Bahá’í, if that title I may claim. One who bears the Greatest Name, cares not for blood or fame. Now that the fortress is returned to the clan, our great chief Lachlan has called us home, from wherever on earth we may roam. I’d be happy to greet and shake his hand. Wouldn’t it be lovely if they piped me in? Some Poems in Latter Days I’ll come the once in regalia full, all for the showing, robed in splendour, bagpipes wailing, heart with pride swelling, love never failing. Shall I wear the tartan red or more fitting the hunting green? On those two colours I’m very keen. One Persian Herald once wore the green, while the Persian Prince donned red, the colour of blood, love, sacrifice and death. While “Virtue Mine Honour,” the old standby, is a noble estate, most honourable and high, I’ll stake my soul on the name BAHA’I. Jack McLean The Consolations of Aging Growing old is not the best, Many things I could do with less, But one thing friends I must confess, Mornings I do like having not to dress. Some Poems in Latter Days Life After Life The blind priestess who doesn’t like my religion asked: “So what will you do in the next life?” “Do?” I replied. “Whatever the Lord of the worlds commands, I should think.” “But what will He command you to do?” she asked again. “I only know that doing it will be my joy,” said I in reply. “Will there be doing there?” I asked the priestess. Doing is done in space-time here. No time-space there. Silence spoke in empty words, eloquent testimony from a psycho-ceramic. “Teach, learn, study, praise, pray, save souls, dance in extasy, walk on clouds, ascend or descend on a sliver thread or a golden ray, gaze on crimson flowers, created by wounds of blood, watch them vibrate to an inner music, contemplate liquid sapphire, drain the bottomless wine-cup, recount the pilgrimage to the Persian Prince, commune with loved ones once lost in Never Never Land, the Land of Everywhere and Nowhere, there where all mourning shall cease.” “There, priestess, I will be writing no clincher lines. No clincher lines are there, no last words. Perpetual being only.” I said to the priestess now inflamed: “I don’t care about your tired, old story. I only want to be with you if love can save your soul.” Jack McLean Nine Tercets: Naw Ruz 176 (home because of illness) A little flaw is often near to make the day a little drear and mar our magic moment Shadows with the sunlight fall as yellow warblers trill their call black crows intrude with rakish caw A lowly worm will creep and crawl along the earth ‘neath soaring birds. A tiny man looks up in awe. Does gentle rain from snow-white clouds to wash parched land descend? blacker billows pile high Adam’s ale to send. What broken heart can heal again from its sore wound were nothing there to mend? We pause to find a way to see why our world when we are here be sliding-scale from dark to clear? Nights are tinged with soft moonglow days are spent with friend and foe to augment our joy, it must be so. Perfection’s bliss cannot obtain if in this life we strive to gain to pilgrims all, their joy, their pain. Days fly by. Then build the world anew. In that green garden, claim flowers fair of seeds once sown. To strive is not in vain. Some Poems in Latter Days Toronto Then What did it mean then to turn that corner down the hill to the right up Saskatoon wheel on by suburban homes the tree-lined streets turning green and tender this coming spring? I watch the spot here from this corner now a café where I sip my tea survey it all again. It meant the eager heart was coming home to the fair haven, place of rest and safety overlooking the ravine the creek flowing gently below where love’s fond embrace would wrap you in its arms and say: “Stay! You are home. Here you belong. You are ours. We are yours forever and a day.” These places in the heart remain the true landscapes, skyscapes Jack McLean seascapes, escapes, where you first tasted ease, prosperity, success the first great revelation, joy of spiritual discovery true joy on true joy. It meant caring sharing the passion watching our numbers grow increase our communion in the days of our youth when troubles never came and sorrows were not nigh. The days of our lives that followed burnished the callow youth in the baptism of fire, manhood burned to ashes all that was to leave us pensive. Did we but know then the day of discovery was to rebuild Jerusalem stone on stone in our precious present moments could we but realize the weight of it all the chance to build the world anew. Some Poems in Latter Days Night Sounds in Lambasa, Fiji (For the friends in Evin Prison) Three in the morning. I lie awake listening to the howling dogs. Half-wild, they roam the side streets daylong, neither fearing nor threatening you, giving space, trotting by to find the next morsel left in the trash. Once, on a hot afternoon, a pack watched me coming. Numbers made them brave. They stood their ground, menacing, fixed their gaze on me. I stooped and pick up two jagged stones, ready for a fight. Turning tail, they bolted with fright. They have known the sting of the stone on their flesh. I turn on my mattress, wait for the barking frenzy to subside. The dog nearest seems to be standing below my window. There is a pause, a welcome momentary silence. Then, in the distance, another call and a bark. The howling starts again. On and on it goes for most of the night. Sleep comes in fits and starts. The roosters join the fray. Aye karumba! It’s one flew over the cuckoo’s nest. Mad sounds everywhere—howling dogs, cocks crowing. All we need is the braying donkey to make the cacophony complete. I smile a little smile. Before I slept, I listened to the mad shouts of the Pentecostal minister down the road, Jack McLean reviving his congregation, and the incessant gospel choir, rocking on to the beat of the thumping heavy bass, then soothing, comforting, praising with Hallelulyahs, not just Sunday but every day till doomsday, the sound carried by double-decker speakers invading the neighbourhood with mega decibels, morning, afternoon and far into night. Soon the tropical birds will sound the first note of morning. The muezzin will call the faithful to prayer at 5 a.m. Even at this hour, cars rumble by on Ritova Street, kicking up dust, crunching stones, pinging tires with the tension. I think of the Yaran in Evin prison, their silence, isolation, such things as I dare not contemplate. I fix my mind on them, join them in their prayers, in this world wide web of supplication, join my thoughts to theirs, to that love that no injustice can ever defeat, to that sustaining Spirit that will penetrate the thick walls of Evin. In the darkness of night without sleep, breathing the dust, I remember them, sleeping here on the floor, bearing the strange noises in the night. What pale discomfort can compare to their sacrifice, what small endurance can pay tribute to such nobility? Some Poems in Latter Days Meditation on Time and Grace in Latter Days This suspense of time is grace. The momentary hush of din that hurts our ears we greet with a grateful heart at rest, despite our knowing that motion is perpetual. The mighty machine of time breaks its silence lurches to life again, gigantic wheels turning gears grinding, cogs revolve precisely in the tick-tock of a mechanical clock. The giant cyclopes wakes to its own hunger seeking to devour its harvest of souls. The bell tolls, its appointed hour sounds. Another loved one disappears beyond the veil, while our failing numbers leaves us stranded on this rocky beach, drenched by raging waves awaiting the beckoning call, the hour none puts back. The stalking fowler casts his net, traps a blithe unwary bird, its singing muted by a sudden silence. Who will be the last of friends to outlive all the rest? These shattered fragments of our lives the blissful moments framed in the picture gallery frozen once in time, the myriad thoughtful faces know not how Love Herself raised up such a throng, a multitude of singers singing Love’s exalted song. Scholars, poets, music-makers, dancers, workers strive to leave a tiny trace of their life of days. Will we remember their shining faces? Jack McLean In Kullu Shay when the many are restored to the One we will live again, gathered on the farthest shore when all earth’s thirsty droplets—creeks, streams, torrents, running rivers will regain the Seven Seas. There, east of Eden, myriad names we shall be, pure mirrors in the sun, when being and doing are one and there are no tomorrows to leave our deeds undone. Some Poems in Latter Days A Man Named John (John Rager, Miraris Amicum) He walked the path of sorrow, He’s known the path of love, Told the truth to sway the hearts, His mandate from above. Now one more chapter’s finally writ, The sign posts are all clear, An open road is beckoning him, Though loving hearts are near. Our pioneer has made a plan, For north of Montreal, With Josh and Min, the grands are in, He’s venturing his all. For little ones to show the way, To make the world anew, In golden years to play his part, The workers are so few! Ruefully we watch him part, To fulfill his noble plan, Knights, teachers, soldiers, heroes, Building Glory’s caravan. Prayers sustain him on his way, For brightest days ahead, With sheaves aplenty, harvest in, The banquet table spread. Jack McLean Udo in Signs and Tokens (1926-2019) (Scholar, lawyer, music lover) Du lieber Doktor… You came to me in a dream, hidden nonetheless, but you were there, active sense of humour yet. I spotted a pencil on the ground picked it up, then laughing out loud, held it high for all the world to see. It was just a stub, the mere length of a thumb, but still as sharp as the very first word on a blank page, eraser still intact. How much writing did you do over all your long days to wear that Bleistift away! Then you handed me a bow. You still hidden, behind many mysteries, concealed by a veil, just out of sight, until the appointed time. Some Poems in Latter Days It was an ancient wooden bow, well-worn, chestnut brown, had seen many battles. I held it in my hands, that scarred, familiar bow, marked by wars aplenty, asked how many pounds of test. You didn’t answer. No need for word, your silence eloquent. That bow had seen jousts, tournaments and contests, been passed down to many hands, back way back to primeval time. This life’s a roaring daylong battle, the fate of countless generations, fighting their way through the din. Your message in signs and tokens. Phaidon! Take thy bow! Waste your life in labour, do battle while smiling away, laughing away these passing days. Jack McLean Meditation on an Egyptian Alabaster Vase Our love is a like an Egyptian alabaster vase sitting on an end table. Beautifully translucent, it reflects the light in all its purity. I watch it from a distance absorb the light, warm, silent, lovely and still. But I am like Wilbur’s son, the child at the window pane, weeping as he watches the melting snowman, the child’s heart so full of love and terror. I fear the vase might fall and break, for I know it to be fragile. Redressing myself, I remember to trust. I call to mind the words of St. John, the beloved disciple, that “perfect love casts out fear, for fear is torment.” Anchored to her cell, Mother Julian of Norwich knew the human heart. She wrote that love and dread are partners. She knew…knew all too well that we fear the loss of that which we love, fear the terrible deprivation. To love is to have an open heart. To have an open heart is to be vulnerable. To be vulnerable is to know pain. But O Lord, to have an open heart is to wrestle with an angel. To wrestle with an angel will make you strong enough to conquer haunting demons, scatter lingering specters in the mind, finally dispel the illusion of evil, the curse that became a blessing, blessed to enter the magic realm of serenity and peace. Some Poems in Latter Days Bank and Hopewell I am thinking of Bank and Hopewell in the dead of winter. It was summer. I was waiting for you on the corner. You did not love me then. It is still summer. It will always be summer with you. Jack McLean Hidden Treasure God said He was a hidden treasure who wanted to be known. You were a hidden treasure waiting to be known. A precious gem lies buried in the earth. It ignores its own value, but I discovered you before the gold rush. Some Poems in Latter Days Why Now? This love seven decades on. One answer or many? So little time left to us… O but live well in the Golden of Now and there will be eternity. Listen to these wedding bells ringing out in the belfry of love, over the land of heart’s desire, in the country of mystery, the silver bells that sound the song announcing the fountain of eternal youth. Jack McLean They Do Not Know They do not know, cannot know what we share. Vaunting would be vain so I refrain. A love so holy, so profane, all of it placed at Glory’s feet. Friends will discover this love when the final words are spoken. Some Poems in Latter Days The Village Nuptials A small band of revelers gathers down the village hill on the bank of the river. The ancient dwellings nestled above, look down, lend a round of comfort to the celebration. Prayers are said, hymns are sung, but no black-robed priest presides. As young lovers exchange rings and solemn vows, a celebrant steps forward. One lady, dignified in middle-years, beaming a radiant smile, steps near man and wife. No need for words. There in the sacred silence, raising her right arm, she points to the rising sun. Jack McLean When the Rains of September When the rains of September beat at your door Indian summer still promises more. When the winds of October begin to blow they herald the coming of winter snow. While time yet remains in fields shorn of hay harvest the crop lest the little lambs stray. Ere frosty November leaves you forlorn stay thy small grief, yes, lay it away and smile in the sun of the autumn morn. Some Poems in Latter Days I am a Seeker Seeking Seekers I am a seeker seeking seekers in cafés while Kaffee Klatschers read cell phones laptop computers, tablets in the electronics of sublime communication. I am in the here of now, gone moments later sitting among indistinct human voices that utter snippets of nothing. Yet for all my disdain I hear vox populi vox dei. But in the land of there will that ceaseless burning search for other souls be there, there sans body and the searching mind that depends upon the brain? Will there still be the hide-and-go-seek of seeking other souls to stay their search tell them they need hunger and thirst no more? Or will seekers still be found from every land among every bud and flower with each refrain of enchanting music in the glance of the fair stranger’s face when eyes first meet in the loving look of the companions of the Ancient of Days? Jack McLean Covid-19 Moment Easy To sit in the early morning spinning quiet hours with a cup and a book taste on the tongue. Reading a pretty poem to think on the greats— mighty men and wondrous women is to know a peace serene, a pleasure almost still…. Alone yet standing with the chosen one by your side, the one, the only one you’ve ever loved in that one and only way. For— resting with a cup and book in the small hours of the darkened dawn as misty rain descends like holy revelation, silent at the statue of a plaster saint. The liquid veil that drops from moist grey skies, when the idle talk of women and men and commerce sexual does not find me. Neither— the doubts, the mind perplexed by the paradox of relations, the circles, setbacks, quarrels, questions, wonderments. Some Poems in Latter Days All these things set aside by the cup, the book, the taste on the tongue, and the falling rain just beyond my window pane. Wrapt in slumber with the portrait and pen, just now, blest by the book, the cup, as the heart finds rest. Jack McLean The Wedding in St. Patrick’s Church (to N.H.T.) Niels stood up to read that day, the prayer in the Roman Church, under the broad white ceiling of its canopy dome, while in the alcoves the painted saints staid, ensconced, smiled their plaster smiles of mild beatitude. An experience rare, not of sight but of sound, the tell-tale sign of perception transformed, declared by the sound of his voice. This man courteous, self-effaced, almost diffident, read the holy verses one by one. Each line articulated spirit, each word a word of power. Authority marked the inflections of that voice speaking from the pulpit, accents to awaken, to make alert, a very singular thing being born in the alchemical elixir, the honey that sweetens, balm to assuage the wound. Niels reads and the words ring out! The sounds are steel bullets that explode in your heart. Niels is the new man, priest beyond priest, tower of strength, Some Poems in Latter Days index of God’s humanity, divinity that we all are. What I heard that day— the lion’s roar, warrior engaged in mighty battle, while we the timid creatures shied away in the thicket, fell silent with the thunder, listened with ears amazed. Jack McLean In Sleep’s Shadows Why am I as sad To turn my steps to bed, Instead of being glad To rest my weary head? What shadows lie beneath The gloom I cannot see, Why do I halt and pause From labour’s tasks to flee? Why do nocturne regrets Mar daylight’s happy hours, Wary to embrace the rest In Morphe’s leafy bowers? The question beckons on This mystery to disclose, Do these shades of night Foretell my last repose? Some Poems in Latter Days Fragments on the Wing Bleeding hearts last but a day. July has flown; they’ve had their say. The Bobolink, its tumbling tune of glee, feisty Red Winged Blackbird perched on a reed, plump breasted Killdeer with its plaintive cry have all passed by. “Kill deer! Kill deer! Kill deer!” the plover says. “My little ones are near. Kill me instead!” A lad I listened then with heart astir, alert, quivering with the quiet joy of innocence’s naïve child. It was a spot sublime by Martin’s grove, under spreading trees, in expansive summer fields that had no end. They were not mine those precincts pastoral, but unknowing I did walk and stop, watched and waited, then passed them by. The law of compensation now applies to these three score years and ten. I’m past my prime, but returns are not diminished: They are as they once were, stored up in treasuries on high, richer far to taste than Jack McLean the doubter’s pie-in-sky when we die. We travel down the road that has no bend. The sacred shrine’s in sight at journey’s end. Golden days are past. The gold my hands once held is not the gold of now. I mourn them not today. The future’s bright and blessed. Some Poems in Latter Days Kafka Sitting on a Cloud A pall has settled on the land. Ancient voices out of time, whispered oracles tell of plague, pestilence, vengeance, visitation, voices speaking out of the passing wind. When India was Vedic, the she-wolf suckling the twins, when Greece was seeding colonies, On the eve of destruction Hosea foretold the fall of Samaria: “Because you have sown the wind, you shall reap the whirlwind,” he cried. Kafka sitting on a cloud laughs, then smiles gently. “I told you so. I showed you it would happen.” In the 1930’s a little child warned of a “strangely disordered world.” The one we have inherited is the same one we have made. As I drive by the Experimental Farm the land looks strong. Patchwork colours in fields of barley, corn, oats and wheat shimmer in the August sun. Babes-in-arms, adolescents, children, cyclists, women, men, the healthy aged stroll down the lanes, walking freely in the open air… MASKED! Heaven’s gone wrong. Earth sings a mournful song. Jack McLean How We Die Some die electrocuted, others poisoned, still others shot in the back, or leave us by degrees. A few walk through the Fall, as mellow as Autumn days. Their hearts have accepted what cannot be put back. I think of the gentle crowd of witnessed gone before me, just beyond the veil. I yearn for their presence, that joyous reunion… Some Poems in Latter Days Arabica I saw you in a coffee cup on a tiny point of light, there on the horizon where the Arabica mellowed in milk, meets the fired clay. Shining steadfast as the Star of Bethlehem. guiding the Magi to the Saviour’s birth. They learned Zoroaster’s light visioned in the heavens, followed the star East to West, to where He lay, the One born King of the Jews. My tiny point of light became a shining star, for where you are “as above so below,” Hermes knew it long ago. Jack McLean Moira’s Promise The Three Fates are weaving their tapestry now. Moira holds the thread of life. Our lot has been drawn. She’s all dolled up, grinning at us: “Here,” she says. “Take this golden goblet. Once you’ve drained this bitter cup, a gracious god will show his comely face. Mankind’s long return to grace cannot be purchased in the market place.” Some Poems in Latter Days No Bird Song This November 9th A cardinal in a cypress tree blood orange as a sunset autumn harvest to dispel ennui. No haunting strain did charm the air. I heard no tune, no song to sing. The bird escaped on the flit of a wing. I looked again perhaps to find some Holy Presence lingering there. I fixed my gaze but there was none, the cherished vision all undone. The sight the sound did not align, the bird itself my only sign. Jack McLean The Short of It I seek no clever conversation quick-silver presence yes like liquid Chinese bronze or porcelain singularly staid light in the eyes smiles ‘n chuckles deep devotion a prayer or two time to while away sleepy hours with you. There ain’t no more. But this will be enough my dears to still a querulous heart and calm its fears. Some Poems in Latter Days The Passing of JD The choice is mine. What shall I say? “I’m so sad Jim you’re not still here. Your passing by was but a day.” Or better yet to hear it said: “I’m so glad Jim you passed our way.” Jack McLean Just like a Child You were talking on the phone your back turned when I opened the kitchen cupboard door quickly unscrewed the lid plunged my finger into the almond butter (twice) furtively put it in my mouth hoping that you wouldn’t glance my way and catch me in the act. Served me right that three oily drops splashed on the front of my hunter green sweater those drops my punishment for horrors known and unknown. I didn’t tell. I couldn’t… Some Poems in Latter Days Snowflakes and Gardens Once there wasn’t now there is a silent snowfall mystery coming down. Tell me if you can how many snowflakes are falling down down down down from the clouds of heaven. We are snowflakes too each a different design. How many are we? Compute the possibilities. The multi-billions are we drifting along in the air of planet earth blowing where we will. With snowflakes we can make snow babies, snow men, snow women sparkling white as light, snow people that will melt in the spring sunshine. If we make haste we can build a world snow white, designs so bright reflecting light as to make the world aglow. Jack McLean Snow flakes warm to touch resist the sun’s hot rays till springtime comes and summer births around our earth the paradise to be. Some Poems in Latter Days Happy New Year 2021 What would it be at the end of the year not to remember those who are dear? A word just might reach them this word from afar to bless them and keep them as safe as the stars. All through the year that lies just ahead may your hearts know the peace that quells fear and dread. With a surplus of love and an excess of joy I send New Year’s greetings for your hearts to enjoy. Jack McLean A Poem is a Metaphysical Thing The squirrels are always moving in the trees. They are not still for long. The birds forage for easy food at my feeder, then rest in the cedar trees along the back fence. The scene calls up “the emperor of ice cream.” What does it mean to be the emperor of ice cream? To have nothing really? To be a rich business man? To get the super-duper cone you wanted daddy to buy you at the country fair? Maybe he was at a carnival. When language can be so ambiguous, there you have a poem, or when “seem” and “cream” rhyme, otherwise the lines make poetic philosophy, because Plato philosophized in verse. When intellect and imagination, the mistress of us all, embraces the mind in the supreme seduction, words become birds: then you have a poem. Or you have poetic metaphysics because your name is Wallace Stevens, and your poems are Zen koans, when the imagination betrays its intellectual lover, even when Some Poems in Latter Days you try with all your might to give her just what she wants. A poem is a step into the infinite, but it is never quite there, never really anywhere, no closer than when it started, never just anything, even when it seems finished, perfect, and everyone applauds. No, a poem is a metaphysical thing, a verbal architect that builds the Brooklyn bridge, or erects a building to scrape the sky, composes a baroque symphony, sculpts in stone like Rodin, only to see it evaporate when you’re no longer looking. Then it’s gone, when the words dry up on the page and you stare at the blank white screen when the electronic pulse beats its drum no more. No more heart beats. It is quite the thing, the line that is never finished, leaving us with a paradox, blissful but unsatisfied, till we keep striving again and again, like the carnival man who barks out loud: “Step right this way folks!” “Everybody’s a winner. Only a dollar a toss!” Just like the emperor of ice cream. Jack McLean The Valley of Content Brightly coloured things that ring, crystal waters murmur melodies as they sing. The spring in the step that was not there yesterday, silver bells pealing zeal. The return to wonder and the things of youth, pause in the learning hard lessons of truth. Lady Wisdom beckons in her light, veiled attire; she directs me to the moon. In the silent vision from the time of when, she raises her right arm, points an urgent finger heavenward. I hear her say --yet wordless is her mouth-- “To the moon!” “I direct you to the moon!” Some Poems in Latter Days The Last Vestiges of Winter March 25th. Vague rumblings in the sky before midnight. Distracted, I barely notice, soon forgetting. At past twelve. I stand at the window. In the light of the outside lamp a gentle downpour casts a lustrous sheen on rebel patches of snow, remnant fingers of ice, clinging to the breast of the still frozen land. I open the window a crack, lower the blind, draw the curtains, reflect in the still of the night on the din of the day. Perhaps this falling rain is mercy from heaven, a cipher to wash away these icicles in the heart, cold slivers of resentment echoes of the soul’s past pain. Jack McLean A cipher from Sancta Sophia to forgive, forget, begin again, let this copious rain melt the cryptic crystals that exile us to never-never-land. Bountiful flood to melt the last vestiges of a discordant winter. To bind each to each and so dispel our common grief, to water the lilies in the valley, that bloom again in spring. Some Poems in Latter Days Covid Dialog with Self in a Day in the Life “It belongs to the city,” I said to her, but did I say it in a dream or in the other altered reality? My frail blue forget-me-nots will soon be pushing their way up in my garden patch behind the patio, but the earth is so poor. I really should add some black topsoil. Now why did she have to go and say that? I thought we were only friends. Complications…What is she thinking? I am almost 76 years old! But Covid times are desperate times! And why doesn’t he learn to be gentler after all these years? Why does everything have to be so hard? Does it always have to be a confrontation, contradiction or a lesson? It seems some people cannot engage without conflict. I’m heading for the hills! Covid is already hunkering us down. Why should I hunker myself down even more? Old Laura Davis in Toronto did say it was “time to go into the picture” at the end of her days. It seems there is a movement toward the center as we age— Jack McLean to the central core, the virginal point that is the soul. Yes, the soul is the pure point, the God within. It is the supreme mystery where only sacred words are spoken. My inflamed, neuropathic lobster feet! I never get a break except when I sleep! But I force myself to walk. Those newly translated prayers of ‘Abdu’l-Baha are magnificent, encouraging, uplifting. He must have foreseen this dire affliction. I am tired of fighting the little birdies. They can just make their nest in the rafters above the patio. Let nature take its course. Besides, I shouldn’t be climbing a step-ladder anymore to hang my clothes on the lines up there. Let them have their space and do their natural thing. Mother Nature has willed it so. I find small moments of content to see them flitting back-and-forth with little bits of grass in the beaks to build their nest. If they finish their task, soon the tiny birds will be chirping in the nest above my head, another generation of avian creatures starting on its journey. But then there will be the sweeping up and cleaning the bird droppings. Ha! Some Poems in Latter Days Fareed Zakaria is a brilliant mind. He has such a comprehensive grasp of global affairs. Fundamentally he’s an optimist. He still believes in the American Dream. It’s amusing that he still calls himself “an immigrant.” He is accepted as a 100 percent American by other Americans. But his is a nice touch of humble, self-deprecation. I wonder if he has any relationship with his Islamic origins? He says that Covid will foster human ingenuity, the digital economy will make some richer, others poorer. I think he’s right had it not been for Covid, the terrible injustice of police killings with impunity and Black Lives Matter would never have exploded onto the world stage, even though it has been simmering for years. Oh here comes a dark-eyed Junco flying in to capture a white seed at my bird feeder. Its tiny claws grasp the mesh, then it pecks through the screen. It takes only moments and it flies off to rest in the cedar trees along the back fence. Well I’m behind the time. Enough musing. Rushing off now to another task. I hear Carl Sandburg’s voice in The People, Yes: “Where to? What next?” Jack McLean The Rescue Hope fades fast within her breast, the long slow hours of anxious waiting, heart still pounding, breath abating. The ladder’s raised, the man above extends his arms, her loss turns into gain, a look, a leap, a gentle cry and kitty’s home again! Some Poems in Latter Days Father Before the Mirror Today father I am remembering the way you combed your hair. Not that you had much hair on top; a thin brown slick of it on your crown. You stood before the mirror, after taking a determined stance, facing yourself squarely, planting your feet, as if performing a ritual. You cleared your throat. Then you passed your small black pocket comb through your hair a few times, and it was done. And I, your adoring child, stood below, gazing up at you, the tall, strong man in front of the medicine cabinet. So late on in my years now, I am wondering why today I am remembering you, father, combing your hair… Jack McLean Truth Be Told I do not cling to passing life, It rather clings to me. No praise of this life do I give, As long as I’m not free. The Supreme Servant clearly said, This body’s just a cage, And the soul a little bird, I will never disavow Abha’s holy sage. Yes, it’s true I still regale, In a social game or two, Especially chatting face-to-face, With Jim, Heather and Lou. At this golden glow in time, I yield all woe and sin, These sorrows soon forgotten, When we become as kin. Although you may be weary, By long, slow hours tried, As the creeping years wear on, Life offers still this prize. Kiss the joy when you may find it, In large crowds or apart, The bliss that warms your cockles, Is found from heart-to-heart. Some Poems in Latter Days Brent John Duchesne (1952-2022) From an early age, such a love of cars— anything mechanical to see the work of gear on gear, how cog fits into cog, to make classic cars shine again, like the body of a bathing beauty. The love of one whose beating heart has a passion for the joy of living, despite the heavy losses that could not hold him back. Speed and thrills: hot rods, classic cars, drag-racing down the street with buddy Dennis Gagnon. Later on the discovery of cycling and fat-biking on winter trails. But even cars he sometimes left behind to track the beauties of Larose Forest with Roland and Sue. His height the measure of his heart, a giant of a man who spread joy and laughter to children, Jack McLean babes-in-arms, adults in shopping malls, grocery line-ups, to colleagues, friends and family. The essence of love to Sylvie, so tender and fun-loving, with the odd raunchy joke to make her smile. But some of us knew somehow that Brent was more than these oh-so-human-things. For in that bear-like chest, those sheltering arms that hugged her close, like the limbs of a stately tree, a nobility of soul, kindness that could not refuse service to a friend even at the cost of life. And perhaps a hidden longing to travel in a beauty classic car at the speed of light. Some Poems in Latter Days The Parting (for Sylvie) The tears on your cheeks Were as liquid jewels, diamonds melted on the weeping face made holy now by grief, a face as pure and snowy white as camphor. My arms reached out to comfort you, arms among many. But we stood alone, quite alone, in the gathering crowd, alone, though legions were assembled there. Time ceased, empty words gone mute in such a scared space. We remained two souls united as one heart, dissolved in the searing flame of a loss unlike all others. Silent you were, as it should be. Others spoke for you that day. Jack McLean But at the graveside, above the hollowed earth, you stood and spoke with dignity and grace, words simple, strong and true, to say the gift of love still means love, despite the Mighty Hand that spirited him away. And on your lips, a Magic Name was heard, to plant a seed, and let it bloom, in other hearts, that life may live and vanquish death. Some Poems in Latter Days Phoebe Anne Lemmon (1928-2019) Let it be said she loved soapy water, yes, doing dishes after lunch or supper. Standing at the sink, she would wash and ponder, if not engaged in conversation. And in one room, a quiet corner, a shrine where she might pray mornings, find strength for the coming day. Crowned Queen of the Harvest, every Fall, sharing the throne with her King William, the stately two, sitting near the great black cauldrons of boiling corn. She loved and served in a house on the hill, where a welcome guest might wander back to the roaring stream that fell below and feel the dashing spray. She was for us a strong pillar, a safe haven for wandering barks the voyageurs who went astray. She knew the way. Jack McLean It was the way of love and reason, the path long tried and true, conforming to the wisdom of the Law. Loving wife and mother, teacher, she had known losses, but patience was her name, her home a lighthouse for one neighbor across the way who found illumination in the brightly beams she cast. Slowly she walked with dignity and grace, her piety still showed a laughing face, a merry heart, a warm embrace. Transmuted now by the divine Elixir to become her soul’s most golden aspiration, every heart’s desire won at last. Some Poems in Latter Days Awakening Vapors trailing visions from nocturnal worlds dispel the stygian gloom. The upraised Flag of Peace waves high above green acres of the mind, stills discordant voices once heard at McLean house; now an Appomattox of carols upraised, hosannas, anthems of praise. The sun signals break-of-day. Spirit guides flesh and blood the weary soul in molded clay. Palettes of light splash colors reflect ‘the bright glass of the heart,’ while peace pervades all round echoes silently, bereft of sound. — Some Poems in Latter Days (Used by permission of the curator)