To a Nurse Friend Weeping
poems by Francis Christian
- Publisher
- HARP Publishing The People's Press
- Initial publish date
- Jun 2021
- Category
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781990137051
- Publish Date
- Jun 2021
- List Price
- $17.50
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Where to buy it
Recommended Age, Grade, and Reading Levels
- Age: 13 to 18
- Grade: 8 to 12
Description
Dr. Francis Christian’s poetry offers breadth and diversity to the intimate connection between art and health that is core to HARP’s mission. Through his writing he enters profoundly into the bodies and minds and souls of suffering humanity, juxtaposing unconditional love with moments of telling irony. His longer poems recount stories of sensuality and beauty, evoking biblical and classical images, and exploring humanity’s very origins, wanderings, and often hidden purpose.
Francis Christian is a poet and a surgeon — the former ever since his adolescence and throughout his adult life; the latter, an aspiration and a goal ever since he entered medical school. After completing his medical and surgical training in India and in England, he did further surgical training in Canada and is now Clinical Professor of Surgery in Saskatoon, a city in Western Canada.
Dr. Christian regards poetry and surgery as the right and left arms of his existence. He is the co-founder and director of the Surgical Humanities Program in the University of Saskatchewan. The program seeks to engage medical students, residents, and surgeons with the humanities in a way that enriches and informs their practice of medicine. He is also the editor of the Journal of The Surgical Humanities.
Francis Christian says of his poetry: “Such consequential and searing experiences as love and beauty in our universe, must have the thread of eternity running through them. A certain deep sensibility, like notes however faintly heard from an Angel’s harp, assures us that this is so. I hope my poems will awaken for the reader this precious sensibility, never far from us and always reminding us of that which we cannot yet clearly see.”
Praise for To A Nurse Friend Weeping
With this book of poems, Francis Christian reveals an inner sensibility that is rarely expressed by members of our trade. It is precisely that humanistic sensibility that needs to be an integral part of the practice of surgery. Medicine is a profession of service to others — our patients. Incorporating a humanistic approach to this service is essential to us as surgeons and as human beings.
Ivar Mendez, MD, PhD, FRCSC, FACS, FCAHS
F.H. Wigmore Professor and Provincial Head of Surgery
University of Saskatchewan and Saskatchewan Health Authority
Francis Christian has put together a wonderful collection of poems. It is not just that they embody the rarest thing in poetry: an original voice. It is their vigour and variety that so impresses: his very sensitive love poems side by side with poems that tremble with an awareness of human suffering, as well as deeply religious poems that come as a refreshing surprise in the brutally realistic landscape that we all inhabit in these “no nonsense’’ times. Francis Christian has a real lyrical gift, but it is lyricism with an iron core. His poems do not plead for our attention but speak full out with the authority of a dedicated artist. We are fortunate indeed to have such a poet in our midst.
Henry Woolf, Shakespearean actor
Francis Christian in his book of poems gives us the mind of a man who has created a welcome fusion between the disciplines of the sciences and the humanities through a Christian vision of the world. These poems speak of an evolving world, wherein our human nature continues to struggle with the irony of good and evil, and to live the story of the Fall and Redemption. Within this framework the poems describe in vivid detail the ecstasy of making love and the tragedy of the ravages of war. There is also space within the broad reach of the book to celebrate the landscapes of Canada, and the bravery of a little bird that winters over in the frozen north, to scorn the Mustang and deny the I-phone, to praise the beauty in our world and in our lives. In short, the book represents the thinking of a poet who brings to life the theology of the Incarnation.
Professor Robert Sider – Dickinson University and
University of Saskatchewan.
Classical scholar, author, translator into English of the
complete works of Erasmus
About the author
Contributor Notes
Francis Christian is a poet and a surgeon — the former ever since his adolescence and throughout
his adult life; the latter, an aspiration and a goal ever since he entered medical school. After
completing his medical and surgical training in India and in England, he did further surgical
training in Canada and is now Clinical Professor of Surgery in Saskatoon, a city in Western Canada.
He is the co-founder and director of the Surgical Humanities Program in the University of
Saskatchewan. The program seeks to engage medical students, residents, and surgeons with the
humanities in a way that enriches and informs their practice of medicine. He is also the editor of
the Journal of The Surgical Humanities.
Francis Christian says of his poetry: “Such consequential and searing experiences as love and
beauty in our universe, must have the thread of eternity running through them. A certain deep
sensibility, like notes however faintly heard from an Angel’s harp, assures us that this is so. I
hope my poems will awaken for the reader this precious sensibility, never far from us and always
reminding us of that which we cannot yet clearly see.” Dr. Christian has been writing poems since
his adolescence, and he sees poetry and surgery as the right and left arms of his being.
His writing offers breadth and diversity to the intimate connection between art and health that is
core to HARP’s mission. Through his poetry he enters profoundly into the bodies and minds and souls
of suffering humanity, juxtaposing unconditional love with moments of telling irony. His longer
poems recount stories of sensuality and beauty, evoking frequent biblical and classical images, and
exploring humanity’s very origins, wanderings, and often hidden purpose.
Excerpt: To a Nurse Friend Weeping: poems by Francis Christian (by (author) Francis Christian)
QUARANTINE
When they said you should sink silent, soulless, to galloping oblivion fold your wings, flutter of
descent through rooftops from soaring blue, feathers caught in stifling space,
now quiet, meek, quivering, composed … they said we were fighting a future
full of foreboding shapes, dark as night, furtive shadows,
and even a sickle poised to strike.
They did not tell me spring so soon would soften the snow, the ice, call the twittering sparrow
home, send chimney smoke in spiralling plumes toward an ever closer sun;
or that the robin would peck ceaselessly on the frozen branch at my window —
glorious red on brown and white,
no song yet, but mocking misery with roving, darting eyes.
.
Editorial Reviews
Dr. Francis Christian is a surgeon, a poet, and a humanist. He has successfully incorporated the
humanities as a synergistic element into his academic surgical practice and his life. He has been a
role model for a new generation of surgeons as the Director of
the Surgical Humanities Program at the University of Saskatchewan. The incorporation of the
humanities expressed by visual arts, music, and poetry into the practice of surgeons has enriched
our activities both within and outside the operating room and has made us better surgeons.
With this book of poems, Francis Christian reveals an inner sensibility that is rarely expressed by
members of our trade. It is precisely that humanistic sensibility that needs to be an integral part
of the practice of surgery. Medicine is a profession of service to others — our patients.
Incorporating a humanistic approach to this service is essential to us as surgeons and as human
beings.
Ivar Mendez, MD, PhD, FRCSC, FACS, FCAHS
F.H. Wigmore Professor and Provincial Head of Surgery University of Saskatchewan and Saskatchewan
Health Authority