“Annunciation: Eve to Ave The wings behind the man I never saw. But often, afterward, I dreamed his lips, remembered the slight angle of his hips, his feet among the tulips and the straw. I liked the way his voice deepened as he called. As for the words, I liked the showmanship with which he spoke them. Behind him, distant ships went still; the water was smooth as his jaw— And when I learned that he was not a man— bullwhip, horsewhip, unzip, I could have crawled through thorn and bee, the thick of hive, rosehip, courtship, lordship, gossip and lavender. (But I was quiet, quiet as eagerness—that astonished, dutiful fall.)” PoetryReligiousPoemAngelVirgin MaryMary SzybistIncarnadineAnnunciation Book:Incarnadine: Poems Source: Incarnadine: Poems
“Our Lady! is dizzy, ill, among sparrows” PoetryReligiousGrantedAllusionMary SzybistOur Lady Book:Granted Source: Granted