"The Thief's Prayer"

Our country house

lies between

a twist of Gossamer Creek and the King’s Road,

wide highway of fortune

which runs to Baltimore, Bethesda and beyond,

which lines the bay and banks of the Chesapeake

and carries all here and there and farther.

One sunny day, I pruned the mulberry bush

and spied two men in cloaks come ambling,

with weathered hats and battered boots

a thief and liar walking,

two for the road with silver in their pouches

which jingled as they came.

Drawing near, the thief peered out

from the hollow of his hat,

he took me for a country friar

and looking for absolution, began to speak:

He stole for peaches, prunes and prickly pears,

persimmons were his weakness,

He’d eat his fill ‘til seeds stuck in his teeth,

at night they’d sleep in the flimsy tent erected by

the the shoddy tales of the liar.

To keep warm they’d burn the straw he took

from barns and mattresses, so cunning was his craft,

he’d gather straw as people slept

and sneak away like fog.

I led them to the screened in porch

and burned some sage for purity;

after hearing his confession

I spoke a Eucharistic Ode.

To bring them back into the fold,

I prepared a host of mulberry wine

and sesame bread, we shared the cup

and silver plate as dusk arrived on time.

I asked the men about their sudden change of heart

and the thief croaked a mournful tune:

His mother dead and gone for twenty years,

he’d wake at dawn to hear her sobbing from beyond the grave

and rock himself in shame without a way

to console her.

The liar wept and spoke about his higher self,

which wanted peace, respect and privilege

which wanted honor and to provide,

though all of this he never could attain.

His lies, he said were wishes from his heart,

webs woven for protection and convenience,

though they demanded doubling back as one

strand and the next dissolved like lacy sugar on his cake

that he alone was left to eat,

as no one cared to join him in the end.

Silent now we stand in the fading light

while the whip-poor-wills usher in the night;

Called by this spirit of my hearth and home

I bow my head to pray:

Lord of all, of children, cats and cellar mice,

of owls, oxen and weathervanes,

Hear tonight the sorrows of these men

who’ve made their way along this highway

with guile and treachery

and forget-them-not in this and every hour

and know their fate is in the hands of men,

will be decided in the halls of justice, kept separate

from your domain of dreams and from

the territory of heart and soul,

Keep them in your care as night descends

and watch over them however their fates turn out,

for both have plucked in their fists not only

that which is not their own

but also thorns and briars from the tree

of sadness and despair

and help them to turn to a new manner and mode

for tomorrow stands for us all.

With that, I break off sprigs of juniper

and place them in the bills of their hats,

press in their palms half dollars and send

them down the road to the tenpenny tavern,

where they may find ale, bread and bedrest.

© Henry Kurth 2018