Wednesday, December 20, 2017

The Miracle Just Starts

—Photo by Katy Brown, Davis, CA
—Poems by Philip M. Raskin (1880-1944)
 


THE MIRACLE

The Rabbi tells his old, old tale,
     
    The pupils seated round.

“…And thus, my boys, no holy oil
     
    In the Temple could be found.

The heathens left no oil to light
     
    The Lord’s eternal lamp;

At last one jar, one single jar,
     
    Was found with the high priest’s stamp.

Its oil could only last one day—
     
    But God hath wondrous ways;

For lo! a miracle occurred:
     
    It burned for eight whole days."

The tale was ended, but the boys,
     
    All open-eyed and dumb,

Sat listening still, as though aware
     
    Of stranger things to come.



Just wait, my boys, permit me, pray,
     
    The liberty to take;

Your Rabbi—may he pardon me—
     
    Has made a slight mistake.



Not eight days, but two thousand years
     
    That jar of oil did last,

To quell its wondrous flames availed
     
    No storm, no flood, no blast.



But this is not yet all, my boys:
     
    The miracle just starts.

This flame is kindling light and hope
     
    In countless gloomy hearts.



And in our long and starless night,
    
    Lest we should go astray,

It beacon-like sheds floods of light,
    
    And eastwards points the way,



Where light will shine on Zion’s hill,
     
    As in the days of old.

The miracle is greater, boys,
     
    Than what your Rabbi told.


 
—Anonymous Photo



THE LINNET

Have you heard the linnet trilling,
     
    To discover did you try

What is hidden in her carol—
     
    Does she sing or does she cry?



I am singing like the linnet,
     
    When my heart does pine and long;

Love, and pain, and joy, and sorrow,
     
    All are hidden in my song.



—Anonymous Photo



HANUKKAH LIGHTS

I kindled my eight little candles,
     
    My Hanukkah candles, and lo!

Fair visions and dreams half-forgotten
     
    Were rising of years long ago.



I musingly gazed at my candles;
     
    Meseemed in their quivering flames

In golden, in fiery letters
     
    I read the old, glorious names;



The names of our heroes immortal,
     
    The noble, the brave, and the true;

A battlefield saw I in vision,
     
    Where many were conquered by few;



And mute lay the Syrian army,
     
    Judea’s proud foe, in the field;

And Judas, the brave Maccabaeus,
    
     I saw in his helmet and shield.



His eyes shone like bright stars of heaven,
     
     Like music resounded his voice:

“Brave comrades, we fought and we conquered,
    
     Now let us in God’s name rejoice!



“We conquered; but know, my brave comrades,
    
    No triumph is due to the sword;

Remember our motto and watchword,
     
    ‘For the people and towns of the Lord.’”



He spoke, and from all the four corners
     
    An echo repeated each word;

The woods and the mountains re-echoed:
     
    “For the people and towns of the Lord.

”

And swiftly the message spread, calling:
     
     “Judea, Judea is free!

Rekindled the lamp in the Temple,
     
    Rekindled each bosom with glee!”



*     *     *     *     *     *     *     *     *  

My Hanukkah candles soon flickered,
     
    Around me was darkness of night;

But deep in my soul I felt shining
      
    A heavenly, wonderful light.

_________________

Today’s LittleNip:

THE TENANT
—Philip M. Raskin

In my youth hope hired
     In my heart a tent;
Promised me a fortune,
     Never paid her rent.

Bankrupt is my tenant—
     This I know at length—
Why then to expel her
     Do I lack the strength?

____________________

For more about Philip M. Raskin on this closing day of Hanukkah, see www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/philip-m-raskin/. For more about "Menorahs in Jewish Art", go to richardmcbee.com/writings/jewish-art-before-1945/item/menorahs-in-jewish-art/. (And thanks, Katy Brown, for the photo!)

—Medusa



 —Anonymous Photo
Celebrate the poetry of the season!










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