By Laurie Patton
Ishmael:
I was thirteen,
and I remember the music
and my mother whispering,
"Why such a party, when
it is only a weaing?"
And the smell of lamb
and the hand drums;
and the involuntary sound
coming from my own throat -
half laughter, half-sob -
after I saw my mother's face
in the firelight;
and I knew
my little brother
was now my rival.
But God was still good to us -
Isaac:
- and I was three,
and I remember
starinh out in the dark
of the morning
and seeing two shadows
and then the clear outline
of your mother
clutching a water bottle,
and watching her wave
in the air,
as if she were talking
to Someone.
But God was still good to us -
Ishmael:
- and now we stare together
into the cave
that holds our father -
Isaac:
- our father's bones
and his memory,
in the place before Mamre -
Ishmael:
- and yet I fear
for the future -
Isaac:
- since perhaps
the only thing
we can do together
Isaac and Ishmael:
is to bury
and to mourn
our dead.
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