Catholic Poetry Room stained glass

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Burlington House Cartoon, Leonardo da Vinci, The National Gallery, London
[Ed. Note: cartoon – a preparatory design, drawing, or painting (as for a fresco)]

Cartoon real as feelings,
but Anne’s dark eyes,
like coals and incense,
tell a shekinah-
story

a subtle glory
in her twilight love-gaze,
mother-close yet inward,
I think, says: a fresh
heaven

has just come, waylaid
the everyday drill
with thrill of
–something–winged
and sailing

soul-ward in the soft
spill of her daughter’s
God-bearing glance, its
–unplanned–
meaning flows

into Anne, its life-sap
re-juicing her sere
flesh and joint. She
sees her daughter’s
rounded

cheek, so serene
a world-conqueror:
so few syllables of pure
self-gift did it, little girl
upon her lap.


Johanna Caton, O.S.B., is a Benedictine nun from Minster Abbey in Kent, England. Born in Virginia, she lived in the United States until adulthood, when her monastic vocation took her to England. She writes poetry as a means of understanding the work of God in her life, whose purposes and presence can be elusive until viewed through the more accommodating lens of art and poetry. Her poetry has appeared, or will appear in Green Hills Literary LanternTime of Singing Christian Poetry JournalThe Ekphrastic ReviewThe Christian CenturyAmethyst Review and other venues. She is a 2020 Pushcart Prize nominee.


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Since 2019, the Catholic Poetry Room (www.CatholicPoetry.org) has shared a new poem with readers each week. Poems range in style from formal to free verse to ekphrastics, with an honest expression of each author’s spiritual journey. Many Catholic Poetry Room adult readers are new to poetry and find the poems both accessible and enjoyable. The Catholic Poetry Room is also used by Catholic School teachers, who find the poems an excellent way to begin the day with their students, to pray, or use Catholic Poetry Room verse in their academic classes.