When
dark clouds cover moon’s
craters
we push open creaky stable
doors,
lead the donkey out to leave
for
Egypt before Herod’s
soldiers
pound upon gate. We hear
Rachels
screaming, sons slaughtered
by
decree, while we angle across
plowed
barley fields, like robbers
with
sagging bags of silver drachmas,
always
looking back, avoiding
roads.
Stadia and stadia later
we
hear uncertain night noises
of
distant battles, lost and won:
an
ox bellowing, and the hissing
of
ten skin-headed vultures
as
they claw and squabble over a dead
sheep.
We pass on the far side.
After
two weeks off Gaza roads
we’ve
not crossed the border, but far
enough
to rest a day beside a huge
abandoned
columbarium, rebels’ lair,
filled
with white bird droppings,
and
coppery green pigeon feathers.
To
rest the donkey Joseph stops
beneath
a turpentine tree while my infant
wails,
wet diaper full once
more.
On a flat rock I change
him,
give him my nipple, He’s
beautiful
beyond all imagining.
In
thorn bushes Joseph finds a nest
of
sand colored eggs, enough to get us
to
the Nile. What cobra-crowned
Ramses
reigns as Son of sun-
god
Re, demanding bricks,
withholding straw, and knows not Joseph?
withholding straw, and knows not Joseph?
Such a vivid portrayal of the journey to Egypt that I felt I was there. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAn articulate Ignatian composition of place.
ReplyDelete