Babel Builders

Bable Builders


 

They say blue beads ward off evil eyes,
      that garlic dangling from a mirror
           stays the skidded tire from the dark slick street.

 

Swing a lassoed chicken overhead, seven times,
      chant a blessing—it’ll soak up your transgressions
           like a sponge.  Sometimes I can't believe

 

the folly of my people. To think some smelly, bulbous root
      could rouse a god from his heavy stupor.
      And the same old dramas, the night flights

 

and flat bread. The same old king and his granite heart.
      Tattered talk around starched white linen. It's the same
            old story. Like cows their cud, we regurgitate

 

what we can't swallow.
      My son. Vic,
            moves out of the house, all facial hair

 

and muscle.  His brow, thick clouds above twin lakes.
      He lugs box after box of what he's gathered to his life.
           The sweat dots his head, soon it will weigh down

 

each fine dark hair. And I can't help myself,
      I'm sad.
           Sweat, brows, it's the same

 

old story. When I was young. I had to read
      the record in night sweats, the digits
           etched into my father’s arm—

 

bird tracks in fresh snow.
      Now, I'm older,
           he's a crow's caw. He never stops. Slithers

 

on his belly from the barracks
      to the canteen where he squeezes
           through a window, steals two rotten spuds.

 

His comrades, caught, corralled, abandoned to the snow.
      Four striped uniforms in a heap on the ground.
           The same old story. And the same old

 

tents—year after year, the feigned trek across the desert.
      But this is the City, not the Sinai! And we're not nomads
           anymore. Still, we huddle in our huts celebrating Solomon

 

who said, havel havalim hakol havel,
      which translates loosely into everything is vapor.
           Vapor! The breath you barely see

 

on that first fall day when you babble,
      and the air is just cold enough to hold
           the damp steam of speech that is all of what we are.