Voice of the early dawn light
Is at the nape of Ubaldesca’s neck.
Each syllable is certain as the sun.
‘You must go to the sisterly house
Of St John of Jerusalem.’
Without turning she replies,
‘I am as green as young grass.
My parents are poor.
They are away in the fields
And I have no dowry.’
Words of the wind the Messenger speaks
‘The Mothers need virtues more than dowries.’
Ubaldesca looks out through the doorway
To the city on the hill.
‘I have not yet been into my heart
To see if I have virtues.’
Angel’s words come again,
Like a hand through olden corn -
‘The Holy Ghost will supply.
As the clear fresh stream,
No woman in Pisa
Will be more rushing-cool with virtues
Than you.’
So Ubaldesca went to the convent
And found the sisters waiting
With a red gown and black cloak
To make her Christ’s bride.
ii
On the Calvary Day of Suffering
She tends to a woman
Who lies in the archway of death.
‘Water,’ she pleads in a voice of dust.
Ubaldesca fills a cup from the crock.
It is a fresh draft,
Drawn from the well at dawn.
‘Sister, say a blessing over this drink.’
With cool wet fingers Ubaldesca
Etches a cross in the space above the brim.
She lifts the patient’s head and tips
Water to lips that spin in fever
Like sycamore leaves.
‘Wine,’ The woman gasps. ‘This is wine.’
Her thirst is quenched with the deep
Vintage of wonder.
A cup of the simple fired earth
Was long kept as the relic of Ubaldesca.
iii
From the Bridge of the Thorn
Ubaldesca comes bleeding.
A stone has fallen from a high roof.
This, her last wound, taken as a gift.
She lay in the peace of death
While her friend, a Curate of the Holy Sepulchre
Made a vigil of seven nights
Until he saw her rise, as if in a chariot,
To the welkin
Beyond the reach of our days.
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