Exodus.
Hecht, Jennifer Michael
Millennia mount up and are we born older, each of us? Layering the
narratives and styles, do we age? Here is the taut muscle of memory, it
jerks and flexes in our sleep. Awakened, we are the empty theater, the
barren-bellied stage.
Echoes thunder inside us. There have been cataclysms, children, and
storms without rain. Of its own magnetic will, the pen avoids its page.
(Even the name avoids its thing.) Put your ear to me. What do you hear?
Remember: grave-robbers came and stole our bracelets, silver miners
came and stole our grandfather's rings. They took them off his
fingers.
We stay quiet when we sing, avoid the unseen hand, practice the
shibboleths of our foreign land, and drive all night through fields of
wheat and corn (so grain remains the same). Are we born older, each of
us?
Here is the Nile, just as we left it. Here are the books, boiled in
war. Here are the fields we strode towards exile. We saw strong shy
faces, signifying farms. (Walk on.)
Tremendous trees, above our heads, bear rain storms and we, so small
to them, and sheltered, keep moving; migrating from nightingales to
larks, from death to life, and ever on from darkness into day, and back
through dark. (Why is it sacred?) Because it is that way.
Jennifer Michael Hecht received her Ph.D. from Columbia University in
1995 and is a Professor of History at Nassau Community College, where
she specializes in the History of Science. Her recent publications
include poetry in The Partisan Review and feature articles in French
Historical Studies and the Journal of the History of the Behavioral
Sciences.