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Page 2 sur 2 Poems For The Paschal Triduum by Ann Hine rscj Good Friday “Just hold me”, you said How to hold someone so wounded so that they will not suffer more? I wind you round with a thistledown of love as a buffer to your bruised and broken body. So I hold you. Amazed that you should need me in your affliction. And yet knowing within myself That pain of body is less than the desolation of spirit in its aloneness. That the power of love meets a wordless chasm of self’s death in the isolation betrayal brings. Oh my dearest, dear, I hear the echoes here I know the pain and hold you in the heart place as you held me to bring new life. I am with you compassion speaks my silence. Holy Saturday in H-Wing Durham Such an oppression of pain here. A world of women’s woundedness. We stand in this tomb clanging emptiness shouts and shrieks. And yet there is a welcome in sharing these women’s grief in facing the loss of all that is loved searching through the dregs of life for self and for a meaning, as death snatches the very ground of being, and all certainty is taken from us. So together we sought you; and as the women two thousand years ago We waited to anoint you. We held each others pain and found in our woundedness a resting place for you. "Dawn" by Regina Shin rscj  | Easter Sunday 1994 The heaviness that so much grief brings is still with me. And I look to find you risen. But shall I know You! You who were mistaken for a stranger, a gardener, a companion on the road. Shall I know You when I meet You? It was a small word whispered in my ear as I went to greet another “thank you” that left my heart burning. Ann Hine rscj Province of England/Wales
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