Sunday, April 27, 2014

National Poetry Month—Sunday With Edward Searle



Sunday seems to be the perfect occasion to share the work of an old friend who kept himself busy most such mornings for about 37 years as a Unitarian Universalist minister, 30 years of that time serving the historic Unitarian Church of Hinsdale in the leafy western suburbs of Chicago.  I first met the Rev. Edward Sears at a gathering of Chicago area UU congregations in his lovely old building.  I was a lay delegate from the Congregational Unitarian Church then in Woodstock.  Our building, by circumstance was the same age as Ed’s, both having been erected in 1905, but his had more distinctive architecture.
At any rate, we hit it off and continued to encounter one another at such gatherings.  At one such gathering over lunch we fell into discussing, for some reason, funeral practices—Ed was assembling his In Memorium: A Guide to Modern Funerals and Services.  We were both interested in the social trends that had taken death out of the bedroom and funerals out of the parlor and isolated it both in hospitals and funeral homes.  That led us to William Cullen Bryant’s Thanatopsis, once the most popular funeral verse of the 19th Century and a discovery of our mutual love of poetry.  I bought his book, Beggar's Bouquet: A Circle of the Seasons and enjoyed it.  When my We Build Temples in the Heart came out in 2004, Ed was appreciative and encouraging.  Since then he has asked me to contribute poems to his anthologies including, In Praise of Animals: A Treasury of Poems, Quotations, and Readings to Celebrate the Animal Kingdom; Beyond Absence: A Treasury of Poems, Quotations and Readings on Death and Remembrance; and We Pledge Our Hearts: A Treasury of Poems, Quotations, and Readings to Celebrate Love and Marriage, all published by Skinner House Books.  And let me tell you it was an honor to be in the kind of company he included in those fine books.
Ed grew up in Delaware and studied American history at the University of Delaware and as a graduate student at the University of Vermont. He received took his theological training at McGill University’s Faculty of Religious Studies in Montreal and lived in Canada for six years. He served the First Unitarian Church of Youngstown in Ohio from 1977-‘83 before he was called to Hinsdale.  Ed described his ministry as “humanistic in orientation and steeped in Natural Religion.” He retired last year and was named minister emeritus. 
On retirement Ed and his wife Ellie set off on an adventure—a trek that took him to his old stomping grounds in grimy. Decaying Youngstown and through the Delaware region before settling in Wilmington.  The result, naturally was a new book Around the Delaware Arc brought out by his own imprint Royal Nonesuch Press where Ellie is the designated “Publishista.” 
Ed wrote this about himself a while back:
I favor back roads and small towns throughout America, urban strolls in Chicago neighborhoods, ethnic restaurants and country cafes, and vegetarian food. Influences include Emerson and Parker, Twain, Jung, Fromm and Frankl, Steinbech and Sinclair Lewis, J. W. Krutch and Hal Borland. I adore Debussy. The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca are my nominees for top movies, but in the right mood, I’ll vote for Cinema Paradiso, and sometimes for Blade Runner. In my estimation, James Lee Burke is a much underestimated American author and Ross Lockridge, Jr.’s 1947, Raintree County, is the great American novel.
I asked Ed as a favor to send along three of his favorite poems.  And these are them.  Enjoy!




April Night

The moon—
   —a fingernail paring
  curving upward—
And above a delicate tip
  a solitary planet.
A simple composition
  in an April night.

I stare,
  to keep it forever,
  at least in memory’s eye.

In the cool silence,
Stirrings—
The pent ache
  of bud and leaf unfolding.

There was never any more
  majesty and mystery,
Never any more understanding
Than in this moment:

Moon and planet
  in a mute sky;
And life’s desire
  whispering persuasively.

—Edward Searle


An Invocation for We the People

We the People pause, as we do at events such as this,
So We the People might acknowledge, together, 
deeper rhythms of our common life.


Some of us choose to pray, invoking a deity
Some of us choose to meditate or reflect,
  invoking timeless ideals and universal 
  principles. 


Some of us simply choose to keep a silence—

  alone in our private chambers of thought—
  listening, perhaps waiting for a Word. 


We the People invoke God—the Nameless One of the Jewish 

tradition, the Incarnation of Jesus of the Christian faith, 
Allah of Islam, Brahma in the many avatars of 
Hinduism, the Buddha Spirit, the Goddess,
—all  manifestations of the Divine realized by 
persons of strong traditions and good intentions.


Or We the People invoke the Substances 

behind the Forms we cherish: Love, 
Humanity, Justice, Democracy, Sisterhood 
and Brotherhood, Freedom, or Community.


Or We the People invoke, in our silence, 

inner resources: reason, conscience, intuition,
inspiration, or imagination.


When We the People gather, as we gather now,

  we gather under a Great Covenant:
Liberty for all and equality among us,
  centered in an impartial Justice that edges
  closer and closer to fairness and compassion. 

When We the People gather, as we gather, now,
  we join the faiths and philosophies that 
  sustain us separately and honor our Great 
  Covenant


In this expansive spirit, we pause, we invoke, we

recall, we dedicate,—now ,—in  this moment and 
in this place:



Let there be humility for the bounties 
we freely enjoy.
Let there be gratitude for the labor of those 
who preceded us, as well as those who serve and keep us now. 
And let there be hope for those who will 
follow, for whom we prepare a way.
We the People seek these things
In our many voices and in our varied integrities.

—Edward Searle


Communion of Our Humanness


We make too much of our distinctions
That which
separates and divides us,
one from another:
person from person,
race from race,
nation from nation.
Beyond all that
separates and divides,
Beyond the superficial distinctions
of sex, age, color, origin, religion, ability...
whatever!
There is the communion of our humanness.
Our instincts and impulses,
Our desires and drives,
Our hopes and fears
Are essentially the same.
We are kindred beings, soul mates,
brothers and sisters—
Of the same flesh and spirit.
I am my brother’s and my sister’s keeper,
I will do unto others as I would have done
to myself,
Because I am my brother and my sister
multiplied by the factor of all
my brothers and sisters who have lived,
who will ever live, and who live now.

            —Edward Searle

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