WE
GET LETTERS
If you feel led help answer these needs.
I'm writing a paper
on Ernesto Cardenal, a Nicaraguan poet, priest, and revolutionary who
studied under and became a friend of Merton at Gethsemani. I know the
two corresponded on a number of occasions. Do you know whether these
letters might have been published? Is there a published collection of
Merton's personal letters available? Thanks for any help you can afford.
Sincerely, Eric Frith
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Hello, My name is
Evan and I am from western
New York(Niagara Falls region). I am 28 and I have read a few of Thomas
Merton's books. My question is when monks take a "vow to silence" is
there a process involved? And can a non-monk take a vow to silence?
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Our newly formed
chapter of the International Thomas Merton Society is interested in
knowing more about his family--to be specific father Owen. I am unable
to find information on the web--any suggestions? Or do any of the many
books about tm include appropriate material? Are any of his art works
on view in museums in New York? Or maybe in London? I'll be visiting
there later this month. Thanks for any information you can give me.
Gemma Fastiggi
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Dear Dan Phillips:
My name is Susan Baker and just recently came across your website. I've
been reading the early journals of Thomas Merton and listened to The
Seven Storey Mountain on tape (after which I went out and got the book!).
I'm also reading No Man is an Island, a book of his reflections on drawing
nearer to God. I've been so incredibly moved by this man, who
I feel has come into my life at very important time and who speaks
to me through his writing as if he is peering into the window of my
soul. I am enjoying your journal
entries - I'm also a big journal writer and I wanted to share a
poem I wrote, which was inspired by Run to the Mountain, the pre-monastic
journals of Merton. The first line in the poem is from an entry he wrote
on Aug. 21, 1940. The last line is from an entry written on March 2,
1941 (except for the word "day"). I hope you enjoy it.
FOR THOMAS MERTON
Maybe today was
the day when I should have asked myself
What has happened to the summer.
The moon hangs heavy in the sky,
Your call hangs heavy in my heart,
And it seems strange to be here.
What is it to me to suffer so little for just a glimpse of Heaven When
You, O God, bore the marks of hatred
That I might know the grace of Love?
Maybe today was the day when I should have asked myself What has happened
to my Self.
You cast your ghostly eyes upon my soul,
You brood over my spirit,
And I no longer belong here.
What is it to surrender so completely to Thy will
That I no longer see, taste, feel or touch through my own devices,
But You, my Lord, through me?
Maybe today was the day when I should have asked myself What it means
to pray.
And to have but one prayer, to have a single desire:
To belong here in Thy Holy Chamber.
What is it to love You so perfectly that I would die for You, Live for
You, renounce all for You?
Maybe today was the day that I understood
What it means to be free.
Or maybe it begins tomorrow.
And yet, this day is only a smudge in the shadows of Heaven. ---
Susan Baker--- (Why not write
Susan and let her know how much you enjoyed her poem??)
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hi Mr. Phillip.
i was wondering if you can tell me about thomas merton. i learn stuff
from library and internet, but i really was to know who he is, and how
he feels towards things. i need help for my project, i need to talk
about him for and hour. and i was just asking for help on what i should
say. please and thank you sarah
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WHERE I AM GOING
My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not see the road
ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really
know myself, and the fact that I think that I am following your will
does not mean that I am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire
to please you does in fact please you. And I hope I have that desire
in all that I am doing. I hope that I will never do anything apart from
that desire. And I know that if I do this you will lead me by the right
road though I may know nothing about it. Therefore will I trust you
always though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death. I will
not fear, for you are ever with me, and you will never leave me to face
my perils alone.
Thomas Merton - Thoughts in Solitude