Half-And-Half Poem by Naomi Shihab Nye

Half-And-Half

Rating: 3.2


You can't be, says a Palestinian Christian
on the first feast day after Ramadan.
So, half-and-half and half-and-half.
He sells glass. He knows about broken bits,
chips. If you love Jesus you can't love
anyone else. Says he.

At his stall of blue pitchers on the Via Dolorosa,
he's sweeping. The rubbed stones
feel holy. Dusting of powdered sugar
across faces of date-stuffed mamool.

This morning we lit the slim white candles
which bend over at the waist by noon.
For once the priests weren't fighting
in the church for the best spots to stand.
As a boy, my father listened to them fight.
This is partly why he prays in no language
but his own. Why I press my lips
to every exception.

A woman opens a window—here and here and here—
placing a vase of blue flowers
on an orange cloth. I follow her.
She is making a soup from what she had left
in the bowl, the shriveled garlic and bent bean.
She is leaving nothing out.


Submitted by R. Joyce Heon

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Edward Kofi Louis 05 December 2017

She is leaving nothing out! ! Thanks for sharing.

4 2 Reply
Rajnish Manga 05 December 2017

To me this seems to be a part of a larger poem. Here also, the expression 'If you love Jesus you can't love anyone else'. I think anyone who loves Jesus will love everyone because he stands for love and compassion. Thanks.

3 0 Reply
Deepak Kumar Pattanayak 05 December 2017

Half-and-Half has been exhibited here so complete a combination of qualities in a state of perfect and universal harmony and love.........very well crafted........thanks for sharing

4 0 Reply
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Naomi Shihab Nye

Naomi Shihab Nye

St. Louis, Missouri
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