Easter Through Emma's Eyes


Called heretic and April’s witch,
Emma dons a thorned crown
and carries her totem, Lepus, into
her persecution as if it was
her coronation.

Resurrection comes every spring
in a love ballad written with
yellow notes of daffodils risen
from winter’s death…

What hell would suggest she be damned
for finding God in Easter’s pastel eggs
gently laid in wombs of grass to bless
a child with discovery?

Emma has no argument with a cross.
It was Mother Earth’s limbs severed
to display the agony of a son dying for love.

There is vanity in everyone…
Unrestricted it will sacrifice compassion.
Spiritual paths don’t always share the same landscape.

©Susie Clevenger 2020

Written from the inspiration of: #skyloverwordlist `- ballad,
Image The Sunday Muse #103, and
Real Toads~Fireblossom Friday ~Love

#napowrimo2020 Day 12





Comments

An interesting tale / character.
Carrie Van Horn said…
I absolutely love the line wombs of grass Susie! This is gorgeous and in its fiction it also holds a certain truth. Brilliantly done!
Sanaa Rizvi said…
This is absolutely beautiful, Susie!! I love; "Resurrection comes every spring in a love ballad written with yellow notes."💘
Truedessa said…
This was an intriguing read. Spiritual paths don't always share the same landscape, that line leaves me pondering.
Sherry Blue Sky said…
Yes, I focussed on the lines that True quoted. Much to think about...........wonderful, Susie.
qbit said…
"Emma has no argument with a cross.
It was Mother Earth’s limbs severed
to display the agony of a son dying for love"

Well done.
Jim said…
I liked your cross argument denied, it remanded me of last week when Mrs. Jim let hers, not an expensive one, slip down the bathroom drain. I learned how to remove P-traps and pop up stoppers and mechanisms. I found it, wrapped in hair.. The drain now drains faster too.
I hope your Easter was Happy.
..
Kerry O'Connor said…
The poem in full is a real treasure, Susie. reminds me how many (all) of Christian holy days were slapped down on pagan holy days to quash the old traditions, which were then demonized - especially anything pertaining to the feminine principal of which Ostara is a prime example.
Brilliant Susie! the coronation, then this "finding God in Easter’s pastel eggs
gently laid in wombs of grass to bless
a child with discovery?" of course! of course!

love it. thank you.
Fireblossom said…
Unvarnished truth here, Susie. The kind that the "righteous" never like very much because it makes them squirm.
Helen said…
Immensely satisfying poetry ... the last three lines I loved most.