Poems on Charles de Foucauld: Desert Silence, Hidden Love, and the Poverty of God - Softcover

Poetica Publishing, Flamma; Thorne, Matthew

 
9798296895950: Poems on Charles de Foucauld: Desert Silence, Hidden Love, and the Poverty of God

Synopsis

Poems on Charles de Foucauld: Desert Silence, Hidden Love, and the Poverty of God

Step into the blazing stillness of the desert and the heart of a man who chose to vanish for love.

In this deeply contemplative collection of original poetry, the soul of Charles de Foucauld is reawakened—not as a historical figure or founder, but as a hidden companion for those who seek God in forgotten places. Soldier, explorer, monk, hermit, martyr—Brother Charles lived a life consumed by silence, surrender, and a love so total it chose to be unnoticed.

Each poem is a threshold: into the cave of Nazareth, the wind of Tamanrasset, the bread shared with the poor, and the last place on earth where no one looked—and God was waiting.

Rather than recounting his life as biography, these poems offer a spiritual encounter with the fire that burned beneath his obscurity. The voice is lyrical, stripped down, and intimate—written not from above but from alongside. This book is not for scholars of sainthood, but for those who understand the ache to belong wholly to Love and to nothing else.

Perfect for daily contemplation, silent prayer, or as a companion on your own hidden journey.

Ideal for:
  • Seekers of contemplative and mystical spirituality
  • Fans of Charles de Foucauld, Thomas Merton, or Henri Nouwen
  • Writers, poets, or hermits at heart
  • Those drawn to silence, surrender, or the beauty of the desert
  • Readers longing for a deeper, hidden way of following Christ
About the Author

Flamma Poetica Publishing
In collaboration with Matthew Thorne

Matthew Thorne is an American poet and former Peace Corps volunteer who spent years living in remote Saharan villages, teaching and learning with communities far from the noise of the world. His early exposure to the works of Thomas Merton and Simone Weil led him on a lifelong path of inner stillness, radical simplicity, and poetic witness. Deeply drawn to the silent mystics and desert fathers, Thorne encountered the life and writings of Charles de Foucauld during a sabbatical year in Morocco. What began as intellectual fascination quickly turned into a spiritual kinship. This collection of poems is the fruit of a decade of quiet dialogue with Brother Charles in the solitude of prayer, labor, and exile from modern comforts.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.