Julian of Norwich in Seclusion

Because an anchoress could have a cat,
We may assume she had one.  That it sat
Beside her while the pilgrims came and went,
Giving, like her, a lesson in content.
That it was quiet when her visions came
And when they passed it slumbered just the same,
But any mice who trespassed in the cell
Were given reason to believe in hell.
That with a feline love of body heat
It nestled in her lap or on her feet. 
That it died peacefully, grown old and fat.
Love was my meaning, purred St. Julian’s cat. 

—Gail White

Photo by rocketjohn via Creative Commons

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Tunnel Vision

Philip Jenkins

Alice Roberts is a familiar face in British media. A skilled archaeologist, she has for years hosted…

The German Bishops’ Conference, Over the Cliff

George Weigel

When it was first published in 1993, Pope St. John Paul II’s encyclical on the reform of…

In Praise of Translation

Erik Varden

The circumstances of my life have been such that I have moved, since adolescence, in a ­borderland…