Friday, November 26, 2010

Poetry, the language of the soul

Poetry, the Language of the Soul

I have recently re-read the Spanish version of “Praying through Poetry” with great excitement. It is a book by Pepita da Silva, a professor that has always written poetry wherever the place and whatever the time. For her, writing poetry is a gratifying and vital necessity. It is a way to show off life and to feel happy. I have chosen one of her poems:

“While soundless sleeps the Earth vast, / her silence retracts, / and enlarged are the contrasts / of her immense spaced spans /
Words are withdrawn, / the big become small, / death becomes life, / and pain, eternal love/
The trembling hands of a man / raise up to range / a God who will captivate/ and transform once embraced /
And before that hidden beauty, / of that time sublime, / the soul gradually escapes, / and it is His shapes it takes/
That’s when the human and holy, / in miraculous harmony, / merge and intertwine / in an encounter divine/
God becomes the owner / of the now owned soul / and that divine yearning that loners/ changes doubt into a mystery once more /
The mystery becomes idyll, / the idyll becomes fire, / and that’s how loves are conceived and bridle / between Earth and Heaven admired”

The poet writes a sort of spiritual haiku, and succeeds in finding a perfect merge between material reality and transcendence. She knows how to transform poetry into language of the soul. (Translated by Gianna A. Sanchez-Moretti)

Author and journalist Clemente Ferrer has led a distinguished career in Spain in the fields of publicity and press relations. He is currently President of the European Institute of Marketing.
clementeferrer3@gmail.com

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