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Saints in Sussex

Chapter 4: St. Philip & St. James to St. Simon & St. Jude
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About This Book

A sequence of lyrical poems voices saints and liturgical moments as they intersect with Sussex landscapes and local life. Each piece reimagines feast days through vivid rural imagery, seasonal change, and churchyard ritual, pairing apostolic figures and biblical personas with village sights, sounds, and folk memory. Themes include faith and repentance, communal prayer, mythic echoes, and the everyday rhythms of market, sea, and harvest. The collection arranges short dramatic monologues and descriptive lyrics into a calendarlike progression, using pastoral detail and devotional language to fuse sacred tradition with regional identity.

St. Philip & St. James to St. Simon & St. Jude

Said the May Day Saints to the Grey Day Saints,
Singing across the year:
How is it with you in October?
With us the meadows are green,
And the grass is warm with the sun,
And strown with the golden pence
Of the coltsfoot, our offertory.
The tapers are lit for our feast—
Tall tapers are lit for our feast
In the drooping horse-chestnut boughs;
And the thrushes serve our Mass
There in the white thorn hedge,
Where the bloom is breaking against
A smudgy, sweet, grey sky
That shall give us holy water....
Oh, tell us, October Saints,
How you fare at the end of the year.
Are you cold in the draught of the year?—
On the edge of the fog of All Saints
And the gloom of the Holy Souls?
Said the Grey Day Saints to the May Day Saints,
Singing across the year:
How is it with you in the Spring?
The leaves in the wood are red,
And the frightened trees are a-shake
Down by the moaning brook.
The birds sweep the sky with desperate wings of escape.
There is none to serve our Mass,
And the high wind is our Priest.
No censer swings for us
From the lime-tree’s blossomed boughs;
Yet have we joy of our feast,
For we know that the Child is near—
The Child Who is born in December,
In the frozen December stillness.
Round Him the year shall wake,
And climb up the Spring into May,
To the feast of Philip and James.
The tapers of Christ’s own Mass
Shall rekindle the fading sun,
And Mary shall lift her Babe
To the horn of the wintry moon,
And ride Him into a Happy New Year.