Poetry by Geoffrey Reiter
The Judgment of the Trees
Judges 9:7-15
The trees, they wanted shade. The sun blazed bright
With life and light, but life and light that stung,
And so they sought the fertile plain among
Their green and growing fellows till their sight
Alit upon the olive tree, and “Might
You please protect us from that burn that’s hung
On high?” they pled. The olive tree with ready tongue
Replied, “I cannot turn your day to night.
Depart!” So spoke the fig tree and the vine
From which the wine of gladness flows. At last
They tasked the scornful thorn, who laughed and cried,
“I’ll take your seeds, your sprouts, your lush-green line
And guard them from the light—if you’ll but cast
Your growth, on oath, in my protective pride.”
Hagar's Well
Dear God, I cannot watch my baby die;
I scarce can bear to crawl about the dunes
And listen to his slight and sighing cry.
The sear upon his flesh from countless noons
Has brought into my mind the vengeful tunes
Of hot derision from the scorching voice
Of mistress Sarah. Oh, for gibbous moons
So cool; in soothing sunsets I’ll rejoice,
The balm which shall allay the blister of her choice.
But in that azure heaven’s magnitude
Do You, oh Abram’s God, peer through the sun
And in this sea of sand see solitude,
The sand-scraped, hoarse, imploring pleas of one
Whose prayers, before they’ve even yet begun
Seem doomed to melt away? But yet, perhaps
As all these prayers, now liquid, flow and run,
I hope that Your hand, cupped and outstretched, traps
My mournful, longing choruses before I lapse.
Not I, my cry shall be, but oh my boy—
Your chosen servant’s seed as much as he
Who milked at Sarah’s breast—do not destroy
His unlived life. I pray you take from me
My breath alone, for I am naught but scree
And worthless shards, whereas within my child
Is hallowed flesh from him who, by decree,
Shall burst into a nation. In this wild
And braying youth lies him upon whom you have smiled.
Great God, what is this un-sunlight that shines
To make the sun look black? It is Your face
Which trades my gaze. The gleaming stare defines
Your fiery peace and sin-combusting grace.
I scarce can look, my eyes not meant to trace
The contours of a countenance that glows
With such a sacred light. Now is this place,
This desert wasteland, holier than those
Oases where but water, not Your mercy, flows.
My vision unobstructed now, the view
Unchecked by earthly lookings, fully freed
From all men wish to see, in seeing You
I now can see where You would have me lead
My Ishmael. Though not Your chosen seed,
A life still worth the living in Your eyes.
Oh prophet, priest, and king, that you should heed
My pleas? I see, I drink, within You lies
A well with draughts so deep, it lifts us to the skies.
Geoffrey Reiter is Associate Professor and Coordinator of Humanities at Lancaster Bible College and an Associate Editor at the website Christ and Pop Culture. He is a scholar of weird fiction and fantasy, and his poetry and fiction have previously appeared in Spectral Realms, Star*Line, Penumbra, ParABnormal, Scifaikuest, and The Mythic Circle. His book The Lime Kiln and Other Enchanted Spaces: Poems and Tales is scheduled to be published by Hippocampus Press in 2025.