Closing the scroll and sitting down to preach
He went to war. His people, tired by the quern
Or the long slog at the plough, might hope to reach
A blurred tranquility, but not to burn
As the lines did in the old book when they claimed
That every prison should be breached, the blind
Drink at the blessed font of light, the maimed
Walk tall, the poor be heard when they spoke
their mind.
He knew a maggot in their hearts, the one
that eats away at the long hopes, to unman
Even the boldest. “Nothing under the sun
Endures,” it said. “All is under a ban.”
Now or never, he thought, and made his play,
His body, a prophet’s, out on the line, to stay.
(Luke 4:16–22)
Published in the 2010-12-17 issue: View Contents