Christ the Companion

When I've thrown my books aside, being petulant and weary,

And have turned down the gas, and the firelight has sufficed,

When my brain's too stiff for prayer, and too indolent for theory,

Will You come and play with me, big Brother Christ?

 

Will You slip behind the book-case? Will you stir the window-curtain,

Peeping from the shadow with Your eyes like flame?

Set me staring at the alcove where the flicker's so uncertain,

Then suddenly, at my elbow, leap up, catch me, call my name?

 

Or take the great arm-chair, help me set the chestnuts roasting,

And tell me quiet stories, while the brown skins pop,

Of wayfarers and merchantmen and tramp of Roman hosting,

And how Joseph dwelt with Mary in the carpenter's shop?

 

When I drift away in dozing, will You softly light the candles

And touch the piano with Your kind, strong fingers,

Set stern fugues of Bach and stately themes of Handel's

Stalking through the corners where the last disquiet lingers?

 

And when we say good-night, and You kiss me on the landing,

Will You promise faithfully and make a solemn tryst:

You'll be just at hand if wanted, close by here where we are standing,

And be down in time for breakfast, big Brother Christ?

 

– Dorothy Sayers, Catholic Tales and Christian Songs

Dorothy Sayers

Considered one of the foremost modern detective writers and perhaps best known for her Lord Peter Wimsey novels, Dorothy Leigh Sayers was also an accomplished and popular playwright, religious commentator, and scholar whose translation of Dante's The Divine Comedy is considered unmatched in quality and readability.

An Anglican all her life, Sayers also recognized that "I am quite without the thing known as 'inner light' or 'spiritual experience.'" Instead, she possessed what she termed a "passionate intellect," and it was this intellect and her creativity which enabled her to write as she did. Yet, for all her intellect, "Christianity is as plain and common as bread. The simplest person or the youngest child can be a Christian, by faith and baptism."

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