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					Job Corrected
						  
						"Hear me! Job cried, 
						bewildered by misfortune and uncanny ills, 
						burdened by disappointment and nights without rest, 
						distracted by rotting flesh and unhealing wounds, 
						alone before his God. 
						 
						Hear my entreaty, oh Lord. 
						Let me spit out my soul at your feet, 
						like a half chewed apple, 
						seeds and all. 
						Let me speak my mind 
						before you snuff it out without respite. 
						 
						And the Great Silence beckoned to him 
						as if listening. 
						 
						What have I done to you 
						that you make my nightmares come to life 
						while you fill my days with death? 
						 
						I was once a man sought 
						for wisdom, for friendship, for joy, 
						like a virgin bride set in white 
						without stain before the world. 
						 
						But you have made a mockery of this humble sanctity 
						once called a satisfied life. 
						Although I followed the good path, 
						believing, as I did, in righteous labor 
						and in the innocence of reason, 
						You punish me. 
						 
						What have I done to deserve this? 
						 
						You let the wicked prosper. You let the faithful starve. 
						You let children die in streets, prostituted by desease and apathy. 
						You shepherd a world that can only be saved through Sacrifice 
						and only redeemed by Death. What sort of justice is this? 
						 
						Why do You make pain the key to heaven 
						and leave the earth locked to those who need? 
						 
						Where is the gravity of love 
						in Your blessed creation? 
						Do You, outside the rotation of life and death, 
						not feel this holy pull? This mortal guilt? This single need? 
						 
						Cant You see? Dont You have eyes like mine? 
						Is this why You wish us all to vainly grope 
						in a world that wants only to be understood? 
						 
						Show Your face! Help me understand! 
						Your silence has torn out my tongue 
						and left me without a taste for life. 
						His bitterness spent, 
						Jacob fell to his knees. 
						For the first time in his once proud existence 
						Job's head bowed with shame 
						before his forefathers faith, 
						exhausted by the weight of his unsupported dignity. 
						He listened, ready for correction. 
						Ready for any argument that might dispute 
						this human desire 
						for sense. 
						The Blinding Response came, in hellfire and brimstone, 
						or so the legend states, but, 
						in the end, the sound and fury failed to answer 
						what had been asked. 
						Job remained half a Man, for the true potential of any man 
						is nurtured only in the reflection of seeing eyes. 
						And Job's questions remain half a Truth, 
						for he sought his answers amidst an infitinte darkness. 
						Yet, the world, as bright as ever, 
						could not shake this echoed cry. 
						A new voice, godlike in it's persistence, 
						whispers in the bones of his children's children.  |