Blackletter

In response to a Middle English facsimile of the Gospel of Luke

The minims of textualis crowd themselves,
ascenders aplenty but descenders few,
into Wycliffe’s words of Gabriel to Mary:
Every word shall not be unpossible to God.
Eyes deceive; should that not be impossible?

But Gothic palaeography is imprecise at best,
one scribe’s work distinguishable from the next
though no two like words be glyphed the same;
in Latin rotunda, the smallest mimes of the gods
of snow do not wish at all the wine be diminished
,
would be penned as nothing more than an echelon
of militantly mystifying and tittle-free Indiaed iotae.

     No Carolingian curve to aid
     No printing-press dotted aye
     No serif, nor digitized kerning
     Proportional space or justification

Just Simeon’s song and sufficient strokes to wound:
yea, a very sword to pass through thine own soul—
that the thoughts of many hearts be revealed
.

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