poetry


Karen K. Adams
African Angelus


Heather Thompson
Alessandro's Ascent


Daniel Gibbons
Autumnal


Cristina Montes
The Edge of the Sea


Shannon Berry
Ephphetha, that is, Be Opened


Karen K. Adams
Little Hours


Rosemarie Monge
May Showers


Amos Hunt
Night Crossing


Sarah DeCorla-Souza
Ordinary Time


J.B. Toner
The Play Continues


J.B. Toner
To Whom Much is Given


Daniel Gibbons
Villain, Elle?


Back to Mary Queen of Angels 2006

Ordinary Time

Today is a day like all other days.

Today, like every day,
I worry about time.

Today, a satellite wheels around the Earth,
a child dies of hunger on a hot dirt floor
and lacquered fingernails type a dull staccato
on a computer keyboard nineteen stories in the air.

Today, at church,
it is the twenty-third Sunday
in Ordinary Time, and the priest wears
the emerald vestments redolent
of ordinariness, of pay stubs and train tickets
and Monday afternoons in November.

Today, you talk blandly to me of mortgages,
of the price of gasoline, of the sump pump
that needs to be replaced.

Today, I push our daughter in the swing
at the park. Right now, there is only this—
the churning autumn leaves, the tree branches
that lift as if in prayer,

this wind, this swing, this girl.

-Sarah DeCorla-Souza

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Sarah DeCorla-Souza's poetry has appeared in Visions International, St. Linus Review, JMWW and Conte and is forthcoming in Angel Face. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia with her husband and daughter.