Homefront Prayer by Ross Thompson, written in Bangor during 2020 Lockdown  
Thank God for nurses weeping in break rooms: 
       almost broken after a double shift, 
       cheeks striped red from elasticated strips 
       on masks designed to minimise the risk 
       of this deadly disease yet still in fear 
       that this thin armour is not sufficient 
       to safeguard the health of their families 
      yet with no hesitation delivering 
       priceless sympathy and medication 
       to their patients in the direst of straits. 
Thank God for the doctors going over 
       the top, these modern day heroes 
       marching towards ground zero or bracing 
       groaning surge tents with meagre equipment 
       or facing the scythe with dwindling supplies 
       - terrified, no doubt, for their own lives yet 
      displaying grace under pressure: diamonds 
       forged in the darkness cast by a crisis, 
       ships made sturdy by weathering the storm, 
       their only directive… to do no harm. 
 
Thank God for carers unseen and unknown 
       who may leave the ward yet bring their work home, 
       scrubs soaked in sweat, skin rubbed raw by foaming 
       soap, bloody, knackered, bone-bruised and battered, 
       unable to unshackle an anchor: 
       the weight of a life reaching its flatline. 
 
Thank God for pharmacists dispensing meds 
       to the infirm with all kinds of ailments, 
       for the skilful fixing ventilators, 
       for agents of faith prevailing with cool 
       heads and warm hearts at bedsides of those lost 
       in dim valleys of shadow and frailness, 
       for those comforting the bereaved in bleak 
       vales of sadness and bitter grief, for 
       those braving bins brimful of glass and sharps, 
       for those in canteens preparing hot meals, 
       and further afield, outside hospital 
       walls, for those still reeling from when the globe 
       suddenly juddered yet still unafraid 
       to fetch provisions for vulnerable 
       sisters and brothers locked inside their homes 
       like Rapunzel, for all of those hoping 
       collateral damage is minimal, 
       parents barely coping with digital 
       schooling reluctant children yet faking 
       they are all-knowing, for the liminal 
       and isolated, daunted and lonely, 
       edgy and frustrated, the vincible, 
       the defeated, those buoyed by key workers 
       keeping essential services ticking 
       over, for farmers maintaining supply 
       chains, for pilots, seafarers and kindly 
       weight-bearers, for first responders and those 
       lodged in the doldrums, for those with their 
       backs towards the gallows, for those on fixed 
       term contracts and those on furlough, for those 
       facing foreclosure, for the rose-tinted 
       and pessimist, for the country’s lifeblood, 
       the salt of the earth, the grain in the wood, 
       the fire in the hearth, the bow in the rain, 
       the bringers of joy, the easers of pain. 
Thank God for those who answer when we call. 
Thank God for each one. Thank God for them all.