Sir Godfrey
Pelegrin Crucis
I dost love poetry! Among my favorites are: Tennyson, Coleridge, Yeats, Wordsworth, Lord Byron, Smith, &etc.
I hath decided to share a poem that hast changed my perspective of a significant event in history. I speak of the martyrdoms in the coliseum. We hath marveled at their faith, envied their strength, but we forget the other partner in their testimony. The Lions whom Rome chose to devour, to overpower Christ's bower, but in midst of a bloody shower arose a beautiful flower.
Sunt Leones
By Stevie Smith 1902–1971 Stevie Smith
The lions who ate the Christians on the sands of the arena
By indulging native appetites played what has now been seen a
Not entirely negligible part
In consolidating at the very start
The position of the Early Christian Church.
Initiatory rites are always bloody
And the lions, it appears
From contemporary art, made a study
Of dyeing Coliseum sands a ruddy
Liturgically sacrificial hue
And if the Christians felt a little blue—
Well people being eaten often do.
Theirs was the death, and theirs the crown undying,
A state of things which must be satisfying.
My point which up to this has been obscured
is that it was the lions who procured
By chewing up blood gristle flesh and bone
The martyrdoms on which the Church has grown.
I only write this poem because I thought it rather looked
As if the part the lions played was being overlooked.
By lions’ jaws great benefits and blessings were begotten
And so our debt to Lionhood must never be forgotten.
I hath decided to share a poem that hast changed my perspective of a significant event in history. I speak of the martyrdoms in the coliseum. We hath marveled at their faith, envied their strength, but we forget the other partner in their testimony. The Lions whom Rome chose to devour, to overpower Christ's bower, but in midst of a bloody shower arose a beautiful flower.
Sunt Leones
By Stevie Smith 1902–1971 Stevie Smith
The lions who ate the Christians on the sands of the arena
By indulging native appetites played what has now been seen a
Not entirely negligible part
In consolidating at the very start
The position of the Early Christian Church.
Initiatory rites are always bloody
And the lions, it appears
From contemporary art, made a study
Of dyeing Coliseum sands a ruddy
Liturgically sacrificial hue
And if the Christians felt a little blue—
Well people being eaten often do.
Theirs was the death, and theirs the crown undying,
A state of things which must be satisfying.
My point which up to this has been obscured
is that it was the lions who procured
By chewing up blood gristle flesh and bone
The martyrdoms on which the Church has grown.
I only write this poem because I thought it rather looked
As if the part the lions played was being overlooked.
By lions’ jaws great benefits and blessings were begotten
And so our debt to Lionhood must never be forgotten.