In the Gospel According to Cecil B. DeMille
 	waterfalls turned upside down
 	at the edge of Moses' beard:
 	the sea pulled apart
 	cleared a brief highway
 	then collapsed, lapping
 	at the heels of a nursing mother running
 	before the drowning corporals
 	of the pyramids.
Holding its breath
 	a more modest miracle
 	swims within the legend's tide:
The waters never rose
 	like wallpaper at the old man's elbows.
 	No mud was freed of the Red Sea's sullen weight
 	as the bloodied feet of bricklayers
 	raced before the Pharaoh's cops.
Water
 	to be a wall against their hopes
 	a cemetery for bruised dreams
 	a proof of fear and Pharaoh
 	gave way
gave way before nothing so polite as prayer:
 	like a swan's death song
 	a command to God.
And it was there.
 	The scholar of survival saw a path:
 	flashes of color in the reeds
 	a resurrection of the rainbow threads of Joseph's ancient coat.
Through the marsh
 	skirting quicksand bellies
 	in shallows
 	between skeletons
 	life's toe holds
 	solid, solid enough:
 	refugees traveling light.
The learned, ragged pilgrim
 	knew the reeds by name
 	old hide-outs from police
 	the moss that served as bed
 	the smell of the place the camel drowned.
The armed men lost the path:
 	the reeds all strangers
 	the earth too soft
 	the armor too heavy.
The soldiers
 	sinking in their metal
 	swallowed in their borders.
Death place
 	birth place:
 	in the Red Sea
 	the tears of God.
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