Archive for December, 2013

The Carpenter’s Son

12.18.13

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The Carpenter’s Son

He must have grown anxious as the sun gave way
to stars and darkness and bitter cold,
blamed himself for not pushing them harder,
for his inadequacy, his poverty, the thin
rags his wife drew tighter against the chill.
The night filled with distant stars;
the cold cracked his hands gripping the reins,
and he forced the mule another mile, then another,
around them the desolate emptiness of fields,
a few stray sheaves of winter wheat.

The dream must have seemed only that, a dream,
and he must have been afraid, afraid for his wife,
the child she carried, afraid of the night, the cold,
the empty loneliness they traveled.
Perhaps he cursed, softly, under his breath,
softly, so his wife would not hear, softly,
so the stars would not hear,
and he jerked the reins harder,
hearing his wife’s silent whisper of pain.
And then, the lights of the town,
the promise of shelter,
warmth, a hot meal, a soft bed.

In town–faces at the doors–
each repetition a reminder of his failures,
until finally, at the far edge of town,
he accepted the small charity of a stable,
glad at last for a few frostbitten blades
of grass, anything to answer
the fear in Mary’s eyes,
the pain–

His hand caught the baby as it came,
His blade severed this life from its mother,
this baby, like any baby, dark-haired,
dark-eyed, so like its mother.
Did he smile as she nursed his first-born son;
did he whisper to himself, “This is my son”?

Then, what were his thoughts
when the shepherds came,
when the dream surrounded him?
Did he kneel with them
or stand forgotten in the shadows
as gnarled hands claimed
the child that was his?

                          –Bill Stifler

© 1996, Bill Stifler. At the time I wrote this, I had been memorizing poems by Richard Wilbur. I would like to think his style influenced this poem.

The “War” On Christmas

12.18.13

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For the Love of Christ

They are quick to push Christ
back into Christmas, these
religious zealots who condemn
homosexuals and abortionists,
liberals and atheists,
having hitched the Christmas star
to the Republican party of Christ,
forgetting Christ was born to out of town
visitors so poor a manger offered shelter,
to a carpenter and his much younger wife,
a tradesman, who worked with his hands.
They forget Christ chose the poor
as his disciples, chastised the religious,
tossed out the money changers quick
to make a buck off religious piety,
dined with prostitutes, the destitute,
political outcasts, the socially improper,
and, most importantly, have forgotten
his condemnation of the self-righteous,
so certain of the rightness of their causes
that they condemned Him to die on a cross,
a cross resembling the first Greek letter
for the Messiah, commemorated in Xmas.

                                                            –Bill Stifler

© 2012, Bill Stifler