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Listen to the audio of the poem
Abraham, Sarah and Three Visitors
So easy to dismiss this aged couple
Their caravanserai invites you in
To circus tents of the imagination.
Let love unshackle your synapses of logic,
touch the hem of the Beloved’s garment.
Under this carbuncular oak of Mamre,
hospitality invites three strangers in
spectres from the beyond.
Abraham runs like a foolish old man
Stumbling, scuffing dust, yelling, gestures:
Prepare a feast for our Lords
waves a gracious arm
bring water to wash feet.
Servants! run servants, run (Pause)
May your Lordships rest awhile
in the shades of our sacred tree.
Haste thee Sarah, knead flour, serve bread
Servants milk goats, bring curds!
To the herds, to the herds for a lamb
– the tenderest one.
Haste thee servants- the kitchen, prepare.
They feast in deepening shades
The swirling of branches above
black clouds billowing, roaring winds
through the leaves
Earth and sky break in sunder
Corruption and abuse will come to an end
Sodom and Gomorrah will be no more
A stillness settles the shades of Mamre,
Breathes a new beginning
the laughing one, a child
the mother of many
those to come will turn
turn to you aged one
father of the many.
Close your eyes, your mouth
Let your heart run into this wild
wander of a world renewing itself under Mamre oak.
The account of the three divine visitors is found in Genesis 18. Abraham and Sarah are in their old age. The angel says that Sarah will have a son in her old aged and that Abraham will be the father of many nations. Sarah overhears the conversation from the kitchen and laughs to herself at the thought.
The other reason why the angels are there is to announce the fall of Sodom and Gomorrah.
How fortunate I am to be benefitting still from your wisdom, awe and inspiration.
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Such wonderful imagery.
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