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            Saint Brendan
            Reports    
              
            To The Monks Of Iona
                
            
            for my Brendan 
             
             
            Suppose 
            the world is sea and land. 
            Suppose there are soft mornings. 
            Suppose there are calm days, 
            sheets or gildings of glory 
            on water and hill and cliff. 
            Who would not sleep like an infant 
            at those soft dugs? 
            But if there are long stretches, 
            monotonous hard and cold, 
            then jagged surprise and strain? 
            Those must also be glories, 
            face to face with us 
            as if the cloak of godhead 
            were lifted at the edge: 
            What terrible cold! What storms 
            tossing the specks that wail 
            in fear! What thunderous ice! 
            If we worship glory 
            it tests us: the alternative 
            is to worship nothing. Which few 
            can do, even if they would: 
            small gods and lusts creep in, 
            inherit the closed soul. 
             
            It is mercy that lets us 
            measure the little of glory 
            our minds have strength for, 
            a gift as far beyond 
            our power to earn or answer 
            as the wide sea around 
            our coracles. The answer 
            given to angry Job 
            was given to my complaint: 
            I asked in the depth of my heart, 
            in the courage and folly 
            of faith in my own reasons, 
            "What did this come to? Why 
            did You send me so far to fail?" 
            The answer? Not to reach 
            what you knew how to imagine. 
             
            Brothers, our fathers imagined 
            a West of the old gods 
            and heroes, Tir-na-og: 
            an earthly paradise, 
            a limbo bright with fruit. 
            Why might I not sail there? 
            In all the waking hours 
            of our devotions I bent 
            to an abbot's proper mission 
            to seek out far-flung monks, 
            inspect their ritual, hearten 
            or discipline. But in dreams 
            I met the hero-gods 
            of the old days; they strolled 
            with saints and Christ. Out there 
            the shores of death held bays 
            and gentle strands, it seemed, 
            where the great souls had sailed 
            both in and out at will. 
            Why couldn't one sail to heaven, 
            a journey through dark and water, 
            death and baptism mingled, 
            testing both skill and faith? 
            At worst, we'd have the tale 
            of a true miracle 
            to draw the folk to Christ. 
             
            Our arid minds are as avid 
            for God's truth, which is glory, 
            as the rich man in Hell 
            who begged for one cool drop 
            on his tongue. The sea is less 
            than a drop to God, the wonders 
            of that are such that a drop 
            of vision is all our thirst 
            could taste. Ten years we threaded 
            among the northern islands, 
            weaving the brotherhood 
            that is our comfort. Joyous 
            and greeted with joy, we sensed 
            the great strand still beyond us. 
            And what we saw! One time 
            the peaks of Hell were jutting 
            above the waves, and demons 
            lobbed clods of fire at us. 
            One day what seemed a cliff 
            of seabirds teeming by thousands 
            lifted itself and flew, 
            one creature of myriad greeds 
            like our own souls. One isle 
            was white with wool; monks there 
            met in the peace of the Lamb. 
            And once the sea was milk 
            with ice curds, as from birth 
            our senses chill and hinder 
            the frail boat of the soul. 
            But my long-suffering crew 
            was wondrous beyond signs.   
            The ten years purged my dreams, 
            weaned me from the heroic. 
            I only wished to serve 
            as distant monks' good father. 
            But though we heard of cells 
            and chapels on the shore 
            that ends our sea, we found none. 
             
            The faces that we found 
            were not the black-and-blond 
            of faery but red-brown, 
            wood-savages more somber 
            and civil in their towns 
            than our blue-painted, tale- 
            and magic-addled, cow- 
            theft-celebrating cousins. 
            Grapevines covered tall firs 
            like druid robes, so lush 
            they were. You know that dread 
            comes over those who land 
            on a strange shore where cliffs 
            or forest hang above them, 
            and the surf pounds the brain 
            and the night prayers and fire 
            are both wind-tortured. That land 
            is like another sea, 
            to judge by rivers and beasts. 
            Worlds upon worlds, John says, 
            will end in terror and glory. 
             
            Ten years we visited 
            the islands on the way, 
            and the dream voyage changed 
            but slowly, for I am stubborn, 
            to a shepherd's thoughts of his sheep; 
            and the while wonders mounted. 
            Already village singers 
            tell that we sailed a millstone 
            buoyed up by faith. The fable 
            was born of sailors' jokes  
            before our christened shell 
            of hide, our trust in things  
            unseen. But in a sense 
            it was true, and true for you 
            as well. We heard small birds 
            pipe and scream amid squalls 
            that blew them far to sea 
            and knew them for our mates 
            if God were not our steersman. 
             
            I speak as abbot now: 
            we will not fling our brethren 
            to the shores farthest West, 
            to be deprived of learning, 
            of watchful brothers and shepherds. 
            There are sufficient pagans 
            around us and within us. 
             
            Novices, I confess 
            the strangeness of my heart: 
            a voyage is home to me 
            as a land-roof is not. 
            Our island is my cell 
            and hairshirt (but for your loves), 
            but it ties down a soul 
            that flails in Satan's gusts. 
            The risk of voyage to me 
            is too much love of it, 
            and pride in seamanship. 
            It is that childishness 
            I had to put away. 
            You young!  So full of life 
            you think to sail like birds 
            above the real, not through it, 
            as men must! 
             
            Of what use, 
            I asked in the long reach 
            and scud from isle to isle, 
            is great desire? Of use, 
            I thought: it is God's gift 
            but Satan's tiller, hard 
            to steer. What use in launching 
            to the unmapped, to whale-paths 
            best known to storms and death? 
            What use the tedium 
            of a long sail, what teaching 
            and penance? With what blessing 
            do the squalls blow to rags 
            the fabric of our designs? 
             
            O brothers, the disasters 
            that come of small mistakes! 
            The bare survivals born 
            of routine and preparation! 
            They are the humble glories 
            we are permitted to make 
            while God unfurls the world! 
             
            The mission I had was a gift, 
            I knew. A part of it failed, 
            the joy of the farthest reunion. 
            Like Jonah in Nineveh 
            I felt betrayed, then saw 
            that we were launched to see, 
            and now to tell, a tale 
            of majesty and works 
            beyond our fantasy. 
            And yet the proofs were here 
            as well. They crash in our ears 
            each night, ring at each dawn. 
            I come back sick and trembling. 
            You must all be my crew 
            for my next voyage. My pride 
            was so great, cost so much 
            from others' lives and years! 
            I praise God in excelsis, 
            my sight receiving wonders! 
            Yet it may be the droplet 
            from heaven to the
            tongue                                    
            of one who is to
            burn                     
            henceforth. Stand watch for me 
            in every prayer, O shipmates.  
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