Descripción del título
Now is the hour of her retu...
"In the early hours of June 16, 2011, Clark Strand witnessed a startling apparition of the Divine Feminine in the form of a young woman with an X of black electrical tape over Her mouth. Strand removed the tape, and She began to speak of a coming age of chaos and collapse in which the world of humankind would be severely chastened so that Her world-the world of Nature-could be renewed. Overwhelmed by the presence of One so fully Other, Strand found that love was the only language that would suffice. Drawing inspiration from Song of Songs and the Bengali mystics Ramprasad and Sri Ramakrishna, he began a series of poems to Ma Kali, the Dark Goddess of India, the words to which often came from the Great Mother Herself"--
Monografía
monografia Rebiun38692691 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun38692691 m o d | cr cnu|||||||| 230109s2022 nyua o 000 0 eng d 1-948626-75-6 MiAaPQ eng rda pn MiAaPQ MiAaPQ 811.6 23 Strand, Clark 1957-) author Now is the hour of her return poems in praise of the Divine Mother Kali Clark Strand ; illustrations by Will Lytle Rhinebeck, New York Monkfish Book Publishing Company [2022] Rhinebeck, New York Rhinebeck, New York Monkfish Book Publishing Company 2022 1 online resource (76 pages) 1 online resource (76 pages) Text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Intro -- Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Epigraph -- Contents -- Introduction -- These Belong to You -- Part I -- When Bengal Came to Me -- The Knowledge Roses Have -- Are You Prepared to See Me? -- The Night We First Made Love -- In the Dark -- The Weight of Every Hour -- But I Didn't Know She Was a Woman -- Blue One Day and Middle Aged -- All That Is Lost to Me Now -- The Night Opened Her Legs -- For She Is Also Seeking You -- Part II -- What Kind of Mother Does That? -- It's Me They Seek -- How They All Go Out -- A Dropped Stone -- That Night You Lost Your Cloak -- When I'm Gone -- Two Can Play That Game -- The Festival of Bones -- Where Else Could I Go? -- Brother Louis -- The Ride of the Cosmos -- In the Sun -- Part III -- Show Me the Man Who Will Listen -- Her Patience Is at an End -- Who Is Her Father? -- If Only It Were That Easy -- An Eight-Year-Old Girl -- I Do Not Forget -- Now Is the Hour of Her Return -- Call Me Mother -- The River of the Dead -- The Long Black Body of the Dark -- The Time of the End -- Said the Moon, Remembering -- Part IV -- The Glances that Pass Between You -- Find a Girl and Love Her -- Such A One -- Here's What Really Happened -- I'm Smaller Than That Now -- Call Me On Your Own Bones -- Kali's Box -- Hide-and-Seek -- You Did This to Yourself? -- For Lo, I Have Quieted Myself -- Take the Mississippi, For Example -- To Lay One's Heart Upon the Ground -- Afterword -- About the Author and Illustrator "In the early hours of June 16, 2011, Clark Strand witnessed a startling apparition of the Divine Feminine in the form of a young woman with an X of black electrical tape over Her mouth. Strand removed the tape, and She began to speak of a coming age of chaos and collapse in which the world of humankind would be severely chastened so that Her world-the world of Nature-could be renewed. Overwhelmed by the presence of One so fully Other, Strand found that love was the only language that would suffice. Drawing inspiration from Song of Songs and the Bengali mystics Ramprasad and Sri Ramakrishna, he began a series of poems to Ma Kali, the Dark Goddess of India, the words to which often came from the Great Mother Herself"-- Provided by publisher Kali (Hindu deity)-- Poetry Nature- Poetry Goddesses- Poetry Devotional poetry. Lytle, Will illustrator