Catholic Poetry Room stained glass

I visited you once in your Basilica,
– stonework striations of squid ink and sunlight –

your small head, mummified and silent
testified to the great swathes of time

which have surged and withdrawn since you
drew breath; sighed your last. Now you are

still and exposed, when then you were neither,
scribing your epistles like a hidden diplomat,

all the while stripping your self-love back,
until, wafer-thin, you were gone in a stroke.

Your thumb persists in its own reliquary,
drily taking measure of this crowd

as once you pressed your fingers
to the sick, and around your skinny quill –

O Sister Siena, of slender intercessions,
pray for me.


Sarah Law lives in Norwich, UK, where she is an associate lecturer for the Open University. She edits the online Amethyst Review, a journal for new writing engaging with the sacred. She is a published poet, with six full length collections and contributions in various journals and anthologies. Her collection, Therese: Poems, was published by Paraclete Press in 2020. Her novel, Sketches from a Sunlit Heaven (Wipf and Stock, 2022) is a 2023 Illumination Book Award silver medal winner. Her essay on Julian of Norwich and the City of Norwich, The Soul A City, has been selected for inclusion in the Orison anthology of Best Spiritual Literature 2023.


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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.