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Gratefulness
When the heavens and the earth are snapped away like a painted shade, and every creature called to account, please forgive me my head full of chickpeas, garlic and parsley. I am in love with the lemon on the counter, and the warmth of my brother’s shoulder distracted me when we stood to pray. The imam takes us over for the first prostration, but I keep one ear cocked for the cry of the kitchen timer, thrilled to realize today’s cornbread might become tomorrow’s stuffing. This thrift may buy me ten warm minutes in bed tomorrow, before the singer climbs the minaret in the dark to wake me again to the work of thought, word, deed. I have so little time to finish; only I know how to turn the dish, so the first taste makes my brother’s eyes open wide– forgive me, this pleasure seems more urgent than the prayer– too late to take refuge in You from the inextricable mischief of every thing You made, eggs, milk, cinnamon, kisses, sleep.
From The Charge, by Patrick Donnelly (Ausable Press, 2003); originally published in the Virginia Quarterly Review. Posted by kind permission of the author.
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