The Mother -- By: H. Edgar Hix

Journal: Priscilla Papers
Volume: PP 25:3 (Summer 2011)
Article: The Mother
Author: H. Edgar Hix


The Mother

H. Edgar Hix

H. Edgar Hix is a poet who lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He works with the Legal Aid Society of Minneapolis. He blogs on the CBE Scroll as Hubert Edgar.

Each drop of blood on the road to Golgotha
was matched with a thousand tears of mine.
I, who held Christmas in my body, saw Him carry the tree
and decorate it dank with blood, dark with death.
Oh, the carols he sighed. “Father Forgive Them.”
“I Thirst.” “Son, Behold Your Mother.” What Father would forgive?
What gall could quench that Voice? What Son
could give his mother away on that God forsaken hill?
And then, Hallelujah Chorus: “It Is Finished!”
I gave up the ghosts of Christmas Past and Present
with one vast, vacant, virulent voice wailing, “No!
Oh God on earth, no!” I stood like a tree in a forest fire,
my limbs flaming, my bones charred and breaking, my words
robbed of oxygen by the presence of Hell ripped open, exposed
by nailed Hands; by lifeless hands devoid of
Yet-To-Come.

Then, I woke to find the bed curtains still there,
the dead body gone, the Son returned as red
and irresistible morning. Son, behold your mother
alive again, embraced and embracing. It Is Started!

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