EpiphanyA Poem by Paris HladPilgrim Heart Songs of a Common Poet By Paris Eugene Hlad
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Are poems and pictures I have made; Though none can be more than a paint, They gleam for God before they fade.
Sometimes, I advocate an obscure philosophical proposition or even try to advance the ideals of a highly personalized religious perspective.[1] But what I write is always more about my feelings. I believe that sharing a powerful emotion can bring about a kind of friendship between me and my reader, and the establishment of a personal bond is the best, and perhaps the only means I have to gain a reader’s trust.
In his magnificent poem, “Little Boy Blue,” Eugene Field put this principle to use, writing about the death of a child. It came down to me in 1956 when my mother read it to me on our way to visit relatives in Chicago. It is still the only piece of literature to have ever made me cry. It sought me out and found me. It told me who I am, and where I am. More importantly, it told me that I am loved.
The Epiphany
A Suddenly Beautiful Sorrow Near Broadway, the Waterfront Park, Newburgh, New York 2013
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I wandered on the waterfront Where cherry blossoms grow And took some petals Into mind, and then,
I let them go
They were so pink That God seemed vain
And naked to my eye
Yet I was gathered in His grace, As they began to fly
And as their beauty rose above My wonder far below,
They burst into soft rings of light That set the scene aglow
The blossoms flew in ways their own, Then on the river fell, like teardrops
From a mother’s eyes When children perish well. © 2023 Paris Hlad |
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Added on May 2, 2023 Last Updated on May 2, 2023 AuthorParis HladSouthport, NC, United States Minor Outlying IslandsAboutI am a 70-year-old retired New York state high school English teacher, living in Southport, NC. more..Writing
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