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    Poem: “The Left Hand of Saint Teresa”

    By Gail White

    September 16, 2025
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    When the saint died, her best friend and confessor
    cut off her hand. (What are friends for?) The shrine
    at Ronda keeps it as a sacred treasure,
    covered with glass and gold. I can’t assign
    a special magic to those long-dead fingers,
    lacking the power or the will to bless.
    But with the faithful some enchantment lingers
    over the bones, some touch of holiness
    that once informed a living heart. I know
    the spell I feel here will not come outside
    with me, will never cheer me in the dark,
    but for Teresa’s lovers, every tree
    breathes miracles, and Ronda’s grassy park
    abounds in babies whose young mothers planned
    their nursery colors once they touched her hand.


    This poem is the winner of Plough’s 2025 Rhina Espaillat Poetry Award.

     

    Saint Teresa of Ávila

    Nancy Lee Smith, IHM, Saint Teresa of Ávila, detail. Icon written by Nancy Lee Smith, IHM, Copyright 2003, Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Used by permission.

    Contributed By GailWhite Gail White

    Gail White is a Formalist poet and the contributing editor of Light Poetry Magazine.

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