This Evening...
At the Totowa (NJ) Library
I'll be reading from my new book:
The library is located at 537 Totowa Road, Totowa.
The program will begin at 6:30.
There's parking in the rear.
I've baked some homemade chocolate chip cookies, too!
I look forward to meeting you.
It's Purim
so I have a Purim poem for you today...
QUEEN ESTHER, BRAVE & BEAUTIFUL
There’s a book in
the Bible that’s a nail-biting thriller.
It’s often read at
Purim. Some call it the Megillah.
There is one thing
about it that some readers find quite odd—
in all the book’s
ten chapters, there is no mention of God.
The heroine is
Esther, a brave and beautiful queen
who saves her
people, the Jews, from a diabolic scheme.
There’s another
queen in the story, Vashti is her name;
she defied King
Ahasuerus and brought upon him shame,
therefore, Queen
Vashti was banished, and a new queen was sought.
The young virgins
of Susa, to the citadel were brought.
With oil of myrrh
and spices, they were groomed and primped and primed
till the king
selected the maiden he deemed most sublime.
Exquisite Esther
found favor with him. Soon she was crowned
the new queen of
Susa, regally bejeweled and begowned!
The fact that she
was Jewish, the queen kept well concealed;
for like an abba,
Mordecai said, “Keep your royal lips sealed!”
Mordecai had
raised her like his daughter; an upstanding man—
He overheard a
plot brewing against the king of the land,
so the murderous
plot was foiled; hanged were the two thugs,
but Mordecai
received no thanks, no reward and no hugs.
Hated was Mordecai
by Haman, the aide to the king,
for the Jew would
not bow down and to Haman homage bring.
Haman schmoozed
with the king and received a promotion
but his hatred for
the Jews stirred a sinister notion.
Haman devised a
foul plan to annihilate the Jews.
This plot divulged
to Mordecai was deep, dark, evil news.
Mordecai implored
Queen Esther to go before the king
to beg him to halt
Haman’s plan by the seal of his ring.
It was dangerous,
indeed, for the woman he cherished,
but Queen Esther
insisted, “If I perish, I perish!”
She called for her
people and maids to keep a three-day fast,
then inhaled a
deep breath and did something extremely rash—
She planned a lush
banquet; invited her king and Haman.
Over wine, she
revealed to her king, Haman’s evil plan.
The villain was
sent to the gallows; hanged till he was dead
and dear old
Mordecai had honors heaped upon his head!
The king affixed
his seal to an edict that saved the Jews—
Throughout the
kingdom of Susa that was the greatest news!
Now each Purim
Esther gets a commemorative nod
and although He
wasn’t mentioned, so does the hand of God!
Maude Carolan Pych
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