John the Baptist
bit his heel into the dust,
dug up smoke, made holy fire,
his heart pumping thunder
beneath an animal skin vest.
This
before he came to the
river,
where water flowed richer
than fire.
He took life from the sun,
honey from the bees,
defied the treachery of
derelict rock,
serpents daunted by the tip
of his staff,
the ground mashed to gravel
in the passage of his feet,
birds and locusts flushed
from declivities of
eroded sand and rotted-out
log.
All this
before the muddy bank,
before he came to the river,
where water flowed richer
than fire.
The house of Herod was rankled.
Quarry stone cried to
quarry stone,
sent its blasting dispatch
to Jerusalem towers,
shuddered through the
weathercock atop
the Roman governor’s iron
gate.
Then it was the multitudes
saw John’s great footprint in the earth,
heard the howl on the
mountain, saw the gust of holy smoke.
They watched the
unquenchable flame,
while John knew not, nor
did they, that only the river
could calm the flame.
John heard it flowing, striking
fear to his heart,
buckling his knees into the
soft shore mud.
With his bloodshot eye he
saw the stretch of its ancient arm,
heard its pulse that would
never beat at any mortal’s bidding.
He tore from his back the
animal-skin vest,
loosened his girdle, sank
his staff into the mud bank,
as if it were a lance
blunted from battle, heaved the sandals
from his tired feet, and
cast his bulk upon the willful waters.
The fearless fish remembered
on that day when once
water covered the earth, as
John the Baptist pushed his heel
into the soft river bed, laid
gentle hands into the stream,
bringing with them the
expectations of his people.
All this
when he came to the river
on his knees,
where water flows richer
than fire.
To read other entries in my
blog, please consult its website:
enspiritus.blogspot.com. To know
about me, consult the autobiographical entry on the website for Dec. 5, 2016.
Good prompt for Yom Kippur meditation; thank you!
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