Contemplatively Sweet
Slow-Down Poems to Ponder
by
Book Details
About the Book
The poems in Contemplatively Sweet incline more towards being than becoming.
They are slow-down, pondering poems, coaxing the reader to mull and muse and
savor. While arranged in the order they were written, there is no “story line”
with either beginning or end. The reader is invited to stop and linger wherever
her or his heart is drawn.
Webster's definition of “contemplate”
is “to gaze attentively, to look at intently, to study carefully, to meditate
or muse, sometimes specifically in a mystical or religious way.” Contrary to
the judgment of our extroverted culture that such apparent non-activity is
non-productive, irrelevant, escapist or worse, this collection of poetry holds
the exact opposite. Contemplation is not only good for the soul but eminently
practical, adding depth, as it does, to the quality of our work and to the
caring of our relationships. It is also, for one cultivating the interior life,
inexpressibly sweet.
Plentiful in the pages of Contemplatively Sweet are references to and quotes from other contemplative kin. One of the great joys on the spirit journey is continuously discovering new riches, and then sharing the wealth.
About the Author
Charles Finn spent ten years in
the Society of Jesus after graduating from high school in
Finn wrote the internationally-known
poem "Please Hear What I'm Not Saying." His web site (www.poetrybycharlescfinn.com)
gives information about "Please Hear," four published books of poetry,
and his recently published collection of "Earthtalks. "
All of Finn's writings relate to the spirit journey. His own has been grounded in Catholicism and nourished by Jesuit, Taoist, Native American, Creation-Centered and Quaker spiritualities.