“A Touch,” New Era, Aug. 1982, 29
A Touch
His children planted on the earth
With arms for burdens not their own,
And slithering venom given birth
To raise the hands that cast the stone.
Great fingers touching sight to eyes,
Hands to work the wood
To which they would be nailed.
Hands washed of his blood.
O, cunning one, to separate
The palms of saintly arm
To teach the hands to emulate
A blackness bent on harm.
I wondered at a way to slap
The sliding serpent down,
Cause lightning and a thunderclap,
Restore both throne and crown.
To find a power greater far
The foe cannot withstand.
When I unclenched my fists, I saw:
I held it in my hands.