Solstice Poem—Angela Alaimo O'Donnell
"The day is brief but bright. Break it with song, invite the darkling world to sing along."
We have invited Angela Alaimo O’Donnell to be the second of a pair of poets commissioned to write Advent poems for this Substack. (If you missed Tania Runyan’s excellent poems last week, read them here.) If you are new to the work of Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, read her interview with Ben Palpant or her Flannery O’Conner poems featured here as a Stack Takeover earlier this year.
by Angela Alaimo O'Donnell
Written while rocking a cranky baby
The only way this solstice day
to greet the lack of light
is to sing, to fill the night
sky with music, shy of stars
and moon as it may be, you still
must fling your voice, far & away
the best hope you have & are,
for song is a salve that heals all harm,
the why we whistle in the dark,
it rescues us from the teeth of grief,
that starved and ever-hungry shark
that would devour us. The day is brief
but bright. Break it with song,
invite the darkling world to sing along.
Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, PhD is a professor, poet, scholar, and writer at Fordham University in New York City, and serves as Associate Director of Fordham’s Curran Center for American Catholic Studies. Her publications include two chapbooks and nine full-length collections of poems. Her book Holy Land (2022) won the Paraclete Press Poetry Prize. In addition, O’Donnell has published a memoir about caring for her dying mother, Mortal Blessings: A Sacramental Farewell; a book of hours based on the practical theology of Flannery O’Connor, The Province of Joy; and a biography Flannery O’Connor: Fiction Fired by Faith. Her ground-breaking critical book on Flannery O’Connor Radical Ambivalence: Race in Flannery O’Connor was published by Fordham University Press in 2020. Her poems have appeared in many journals and anthologies, including Able Muse, Alabama Literary Review, America, The Bedford Introduction to Literature (anthology), Christian Century, Christian Poetry in America Since 1940 (anthology), Christianity & Literature, Contemporary Catholic Poetry (anthology), Flannery O’Connor Review, Italian Americana, Italian Poetry Review, Literary Matters, Mezzo Cammin, Peacock Journal, Presence, Reformed Journal, and Taking Root in the Heart (anthology), among others. O’Donnell’s eleventh book of poems, Dear Dante, was published in Spring 2024.
Could not agree more!
The day is brief
but bright. Break it with song,
invite the darkling world to sing along.
Beautiful, Angela!!