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A reflection on earth by John O’Donohue

Let us bless

The imagination of the earth.

That knew early the patience

To harness the mind of time,

Waited for the seas to warm,

Ready to welcome the emergence

Of things dreaming and voyaging

Among the stillness of land,

And how light knew to nurse

The growth until the face of the earth

Brightens beneath a vision of colour.

 

When the ages of ice came

And sealed the earth inside

An endless coma of cold,

The heart of the earth held hope,

Storing fragments of memory,

Ready for the return of the sun.

 

Let us thank the earth

That offers ground for home

And holds our feet firm

To walk in space open

To infinite galaxies.

 

Let us salute the silence

And certainty of mountains:

Their sublime stillness,

Their dream-filled hearts.

 

The wonder of a garden

Trusting the first warmth of spring

Until its black infinity of cells

Becomes charged with dream,

Then the silent, slow nurture

Of the seed’s self, coaxing it

To trust the act of death.

 

The humility of the earth

That transfigures all

That has fallen

Of outlived growth

 

The kindness of the earth,

Opening to receive 

Our worn forms

Into the final stillness.

 

Let us ask forgiveness of the earth

For all our sins against her:

For our violence and poisonings

Of her beauty.

 

Let us remember within us,

The ancient clay,

Holding the memory of seasons,

The passion of the wind,

The fluency of water,

The warmth of fire,

The quiver-touch of the sun

And shadowed sureness of the moon.

 

That we may awaken, to live to the full

The dream of the earth

Who chose us to emerge

And incarnate its hidden night

In mind, spirit and light.