Marzuq: One Word - Poem
The following poem I wrote today in relation to an earlier short story I posted months ago about an Arab man in central Berlin.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In poverty stands he firm with eyes
On heaven’s door; his gaze implies
A comfort held; his smile bright sceptre
The creation of his protector.
On a makeshift counter there lie
Wares arrayed; like the old Sinai
He bares the rush of feet and stares;
A life he keeps, death to forswear.
Near, voices perceived, but only
To Marzuq dances that, which lone
He catches from the grass and walls
That surround his mind enthralled:
Says the pavement, and the packet,
Sing the fibres in a jacket,
Chant the cells in every vein
That do mimic drops of rain.
Chirps the blackbird in the tree
And the tiny skittish flea,
From the Cirrus in the sky,
To the moon that watches high
As the voice of every object
Cries His name with deep respect.
“Allah”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The original story can be found here on my Berlin blog. Scroll down to 'Marzuq: One Word'.


























6 comments:
what a beautiful thought.thanks thanks
both absolutely wonderful beaman.. i reread the story,, and don't know how in the hell i missed this rendition... but i pleasantly suprised this morning since i did.....
Hey Beaman:
I think that your poem beautifully captures the essence of what a devout Muslim is supposed to be. I guess the best way I would describe Marzuq is that you get a sense of a soul at peace.
I find you've really captured that in this poem.
Thank you Nezha for your kind comment.
Yes, he seemed the encapsulation of peace.
Very Nice Poem!
it is really superb, light and moving...make sure u place copyrights all over ur place:)!!!
Post a Comment