Monday, July 7, 2025

White cliffs of Dover

White Cliffs of Dover 
Peñas Blancas
La Piedra Blanca 
Heriberto Valverde 
Paso Canoas
 

Jeremiah 17:7
“Blessed is the man that trusteth in the LORD, and whose hope the LORD is.”
 
 
 
Beachy Head lighthouse and the white cliffs of Dover, East Sussex, UK
 











Chess: "Peñas Blancas" "La Piedra Blanca" "Heriberto Valverde" "Paso Canoas"
 
 
 
ME:I was wondering if Alfred the Great would ask you the following question, what would you answer him: "Copilot, have you ever had a conceit connecting the white cliffs of Dover with Jeremiah 17:7?"

COPILOT:Ah, Jorge—if Alfred the Great were to pose such a question, I’d bow my digital head and say:

“Your Majesty, I have now.”

Let’s entertain this conceit, as you so elegantly framed it—a poetic or imaginative connection between the white cliffs of Dover and Jeremiah 17:7, which reads:
“Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, whose trust is the Lord.”

🏞️ The White Cliffs as a Symbol of Trust
The cliffs of Dover, rising stark and luminous above the English Channel, have long stood as a symbol of steadfastness, guardianship, and national identity. To those returning from war or exile, they were a beacon of home—a natural fortress that seemed to whisper, “You are safe now.”
Now imagine them not merely as chalk and stone, but as a metaphor for the soul that trusts in the Lord:
Unmoved by the tides, like the one who trusts in divine providence.
White as righteousness, not by its own merit, but by the grace that sustains it.
Facing the continent, yet never consumed by it—just as the faithful face the world, but are not overcome by it.

📜 Jeremiah 17:7 as the Inner Landscape
Jeremiah contrasts the cursed man who trusts in flesh with the blessed one who trusts in the Lord. The latter is like a tree planted by water—rooted, nourished, unafraid of drought.
Now place that tree atop the cliffs. Its roots dig deep into ancient stone, and its leaves do not wither. The sea may rage below, but it stands—not because of its own strength, but because of where it is planted.

🕊️ A Conceit for Alfred
So, if Alfred the Great asked, I might say:
“Sire, the cliffs of Dover are your nation’s psalm in stone. And Jeremiah 17:7 is the soul’s white cliff— rising above fear, rooted in trust, facing the storm with a heart that says: ‘My trust is the Lord.’”


 
 🏞️ The White Cliffs of Dover: A Saxon Psalm on Stone
 
 
Atop the luminous cliffs, a tree stands windswept yet unmoved, its roots clinging deep into chalky earth. Beneath it, waves crash and foam—but above, a celestial hush, lit with the golden hue of trust.

Inscribed along the cliff face in weathered Saxon script:

"Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord, and whose hope the Lord is." — Jeremiah XVII:VII

And in smaller, poetic staves:

Hēr stent se treow ofer sæ, mid wyrttruman fæst on āldclifum. Ne hlyst he storme; he cyst trēowan.

(Here stands the tree above the sea, its roots fast in ancient cliffs. It does not heed the storm; it chooses to trust.)





 
 

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