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Eglon, King of Moab

I

Sing, O Muse, of the wrath

That came from the East

To conquer our conquerors,

Of the left-handed Benjaminite, Ehud,

Chosen by G-d to free

The twelve tribes of

His chosen people.

For in his holy ******

Of Eglon, who, spurned by G-d,

Threw the chains of slavery on the

Exiles of exiles, diasporas of diasporas,

Kingdom of kingdoms trampled under

The wheel and foot, the people found

Their salvation in the crumpled body

Of an overweight king with a two-sided

Sword, fashioned by hand, in his protruded belly.

 

II

 

First, in the long succession of Judges,

Was Othniel, then Ehud, Shamgar,

Deborah, Barak, meaning lightning,

Followed by Gideon who destroyed

The altar of Baal, then Tola, Jair,

Jephthah, Ibzan, Elon, and Abdon.

Samson emerged late on the scene

And let the ***** from afar castrate his hair

And his G-dly strength. But for all their

Effort there remained no king in Israel,

And everyone did what was right in

Their own eyes. The greatest of these

Poor souls from His chosen lot was the

Son of Gera, Ehud. Giving his life to

Service, he offered his left hand as a

Sacrifice to Israel’s infidelities.

 

III

 

Sitting in his glorious throne room,

Talking of matters begot to none

But the war-chiefs who graveled at his

Every word, Eglon thought

Of his kingdom and prosperity

Allowing him and his company

To feast upon the rifled carcasses

Of the local gallopers and crawlers.

Then, not knowing where, a sickly

Perception of war entered and blew

The horn, resonating of blood and

Chariots, of men armed with spears,

Women and children weeping for their

Lost fathers and new-lovers. The sound

Reverberated; and written on the inside

Of his skull rested the words “wage war

With the kingdom of Israel.”

 

IV

 

And not making reply, or questioning why,

He knew but his men were to do and die.

Little did he know or think to think upon

That his free agency of choice was stolen

By the children of Abraham. So, he

Gathered the armies of Moab

Of the Ammonites and

Of the Amalekites. With a cloud of murderous

Dust trailing behind them, and war cries

Piercing the air, they rode on to the

City of palms. “Ride, my men,” cried the king,

“Steal and plunder, destroy their gods, and

Shimmer in the glory of destruction.” His armies

Heard his cry

But did not reply.

 

V

 

Eglon and his armies, treading like

The young lion and the dragon,

Casting stretching shadows,

Conquered the twelve tribes. Not

A cry was uttered from Israel;

They tumbled and crumbled before

The mighty hand of the veracious invaders

Like reeds amongst the wind on

A March afternoon breeding daises

On the golden meadow. For years,

They toiled under Eglon’s rule

Under his might,

Under his perpetual night.

“Deliver us from this evil,”

Prayed unthankful Israel—

Like always before in the unperturbed cycle

G-d heard their cries from the wasteland.

VI

The existence of Ehud, G-d’s Judge,

Amalgamates at the tip of his left hand,

Would evil emanate from his finger tips?

Sinistra sinistra sinistra sinistra sinistra

Can he, caught in the grips of history,

Defy his wretched kind? With these questions

He, answering the summons of Him and

Armed with a double sided sword of two cubits

In length fashioned by his own hand, walked

Down from the mountains to the

Palace doorstep.

I

HAVE

A

MESSAGE

FROM

G-D

FOR

YOU

 

VII

 

As the blade pierced Eglon’s belly,

G-d’s writing evaporated from his mind.

Sent to a kingdom far away to conquer

A people he knew little about, his career,

His rule, his reign, would end at the edge

Of a man from amongst the commoners.

Here he lies, the once mighty king

Laying in a pool of his own feces

Sheol awaits for him after his death

Sheol awaits for us after our deaths

And, the young man, emerging from the king’s palace

With a smirk on his condensed face;

After the battle was won,

After Israel was delivered,

After his people forgot his very name,

He, too, from the tribe of Benjamin

Had Sheol waiting on him.

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Written by
christopher-rose
Published
Feb 16, 2010
Lines·Words
124·692
Notes

Revised version. Submitted for entry in Western Illinois University Elements Literary Magazine.

Copyright 2010

Permission

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