Thanks to Sincerae who recommended this author to me. It was a passive recommendation. I was taken in by her enthusiastic Tweets about St. Ephrem, the Syrian.
This is a short collection in which there are just twelve poems. St. Ephrem is a Christian poet-theologian from the 4th Century A.D. who lived in Edessa (present day Urfa in Turkey). He was a Syriac speaking Oriental Christian. He sought to fight the heresies and made efforts to evangelize through his hymns which were sung by trained choirs. He is recently described as "the greatest poet of the patristic age and, perhaps, the only theologian-poet to rank beside Dante."
His poems, at least in this collection, are mostly speaking about the mysteries of Incarnation and Virginity of Our Lady. Ephrem sees from Old Testament many symbols/types that represent Christ and Mary of the New Testament. Also his usage of paradoxes is absolutely stunning. I love paradoxes and in the poems they appear in lovely hues and thrill your probing mind and your beauty seeking heart as well.
Let me give you a poem as an example:
HYMNS ON TH NATIVITY, NO 11
No one quite knows, Lord, what to call
Your mother: should we call her 'virgin'?
-but her giving birth is an established fact; or 'married woman'?
-but no man has known her. If Your mother's case
is beyond comprehension, who can hope to understand Yours?
She alone is Your mother,
but she is also Your sister with everyone else. She was Your mother,
she was Your sister, she was Your bride too
along with all chaste souls. You, who are Your mother's beauty,
Yourself adorned her with everything!
She was, by her nature, Your bride already
before You came; she conceived in a manner
quite beyond nature after You had come,
o Holy One, and was a virgin
when she gave birth to You in most holy fashion.
With You Mary underwent all that
married women undergo: conception
-but without intercourse; her breasts filled with milk
-but against nature's pattern: You made her, the thirsty earth,
all of a sudden into a fountain of milk!
If she could carry You, it was because You, the great mountain,
had lightened Your weight; if she feeds You, it is because
You had taken on hunger; if she gives You her breast
it is because You, of Your own will, had thirsted; if she fondles You,
You, who are the fiery coal of mercy, preserved her bosom unharmed.
Your mother is cause for wonder: the Lord entered into her
and became a servant; He who is the Word entered
-and became silent within her; thunder entered her
-and made no sound; there entered the Shepherd of all,
and in her He became the Lamb, bleating as He came forth.
Your mother's womb has reversed the roles:
the Establisher of all entered in His richness,
but came forth poor; the Exalted one entered her,
but came forth meek; the Splendrous one entered her,
but came forth having put on a lowly hew.
The Mighty one entered, and put on insecurity
from her womb; the Provisioner of all entered
-and experienced hunger; He who gives drink to all entered
-and experienced thirst: naked and stripped
there came forth from her He who clothes all!
------------------------------------------------------
Small Note on the second stanza: Mary as mother is a clear concept. But Mary as sister and Mary as bride is new. Mary is a sister to Jesus in the way all the baptized ones are brothers and sisters to Christ. Mary was baptized the moment Jesus took abode in her womb. Mary is considered bride in the sense that she is also member of the Church which is supposed to be the Bride of Christ.