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The Preparation of the Wise Men - the Camels

They always made me happy, The camels of the wise men, The slowness of their footsteps, Their self-sufficient ben. Camels meant there was time, For the three wise men to think, To ponder upon their task, To review their role as a link. They were required to assess, The child to be called god’s son, To see if he could be a doctor, To the poor, and to be the action. Mary and Joseph were important, To their question of universal worth, So they prepared themselves well, With questions surrounding his birth. They understood that environment, Is a factor in child development, So endeavoured to contextualise, The place of the baby’s commencement. They predicted they’d be rejected, By townsmen all along the way, Spat at, maybe jousted with, By loitering agitators arbitrarily. Especially at the door of the inn, There’d be jesters and jostlers alike, People shouting “Don’t go there! Avoid them, and get on another bike!” And equally importantly, with respect, They thought of their theology, That their own actions may be vital, To improving others’ sociology. They considered their belief, In an immanently coming messiah, And renewed their vow to choose, A protege who would take us higher. So by the time they reached the inn, They were very much prepared, They could talk to each other freely, About the saviour that’d been blared. And the camels facilitated all this, Preparation and consideration, And gave the magi their pondering, Upon seeing the configuration. They enabled this baby to thrive, Gave his family his manifestation, And felt spent entirely at their visit, Worn out by careful deliberation.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2015




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Book: Shattered Sighs