RITA MAE REESE
The Whore’s Guide to Etymology
In early brothels, we
used water clocks, small bowls with a hole
in the bottom placed inside larger
ones. When the small bowl sank we knew
the man’s time was up.
In the Middle Ages, we loved passion plays,
loved standing in the town square
listening to Herod call our Lord a brothel.
Then it meant a worthless, abandoned fellow,
a good-for-nothing, abandoned woman, or a prostitute
(good for one thing, at least).
The word comes from the combination of broth and el:
broth from the Old English
means a liquid in which anything has been boiled,
(also, obscurely, the essence of a boy);
and el means god, like Baal, the one who required
a sacrifice of our firstborn sons,
or like Yahweh who demanded Sarah’s boy
from Abraham and watched
in wordless pleasure the trembling, crying child.
And then his own son, by Mary.
Again and again, he comes to us
broken by his own hands;
he uses our mouths to say he’s sorry.
And we forgive him.