Today I’m grateful for all the medical professionals who are
literally putting their lives on the line to care for COVID19 patients—in addition
to everyone else needing healthcare. These doctors, nurses, EMTs, physicians
assistants, medical and nursing students, retirees and others are working grueling hours with little or no protection around
the world—in rich countries and poor. I cannot imagine what hell they’re going
through, but I send them all respect, admiration and gratitude for their caring
and their courage.
So today’s National Poetry Month entry is by the Twentieth Century
American poet, Anne Sexton. I don’t think it needs any introduction; it says
everything.
“Doctors”
They work with herbs
and penicillin
They work with
gentleness
and the scalpel.
They dig out the
cancer,
close an incision
and say a prayer
to the poverty of the
skin.
They are not Gods
though they would like
to be;
they are only a human
trying to fix up a
human.
Many humans die.
They die like the
tender,
palpitating berries
in November.
But all along the
doctors remember:
First do no harm.
They would kiss if it
would heal.
It would not heal.
If the doctors cure
then the sun sees it.
If the doctors kill
then the earth hides
it.
The doctors should fear
arrogance
more than cardiac
arrest.
If they are too proud,
and some are,
then they leave home on
horseback
but God returns them on
foot.
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