Luminous and Diaphanous Dragonflies
December 5, 2011
Last week after work I took advantage of the Seattle Art Museum’s “First Thursdays” free admission and treated myself to its current exhibit, Luminous: The Art of Asia. I found the exhibit to be a serene, but inspiring, oasis during this busiest of holiday shopping seasons.
I will be featuring a few of my favorite pieces in the next couple of days. Today I wanted to showcase this lovely Dragonfly scroll, one of a pair from the Japanese Edo period (the other one featured butterflies). I can understand why so many Western artists have been inspired by Japanese drawings and paintings. These dragonflies are exquisite!
The Dragonfly
by Louise Bogan
You are made of almost nothing
But of enough
To be great eyes
And diaphanous double vans;
To be ceaseless movement,
Unending hunger
Grappling love.
Link between water and air,
Earth repels you.
Light touches you only to shift into iridescence
Upon your body and wings.
Twice-born, predator,
You split into the heat.
Swift beyond calculation or capture
You dart into the shadow
Which consumes you.
You rocket into the day.
But at last, when the wind flattens the grasses,
For you, the design and purpose stop.
And you fall
With the other husks of summer.
(You can listen to Bogan reciting this poem at this link.)
What Nature Reveals
August 1, 2010

"Benedictine prayer is designed to enable people to realize that God is in the world around them." Joan Chittister
“Morning and evening, season by season, year after year we watch the sun rise and set, death and resurrection daily come and go, beginnings and endings follow one another without terror and without woe. We come to realize that we are simply small parts of a continuing creation, and we take hope and comfort and perspective from that.”
— from Wisdom Distilled from the Daily: Living the Rule of St. Benedict Today by Joan Chittister, OSB
Nature can be another catalyst for contemplation. Here are some photos taken during my contemplative walks around the grounds of St. John’s University:

"Faith sees a beautiful blossom in a bulb, a lovely garden in a seed, and a giant oak in an acorn." William Arthur Ward
“We have to learn to be mindful that creation belongs to God and we have only been put here as its keepers.”
— from Wisdom Distilled from the Daily by Joan Chittister, OSB