Apocrypha
I
The mission
‘My God, such a beautiful wench,’
Abraham exclaimed,
‘But why would she have me
when I am so ugly?’
Uriel looked at him
as if seeing him for the first time.
‘Yes, truly.’
‘Truly, yes.’
The two sat on a stone
at the side of the road, sipping drinks.
The archangel folded his wings
across his back.
‘Fine, then,’ Abraham said.
‘Great things are expected of me
and I don’t even have the basic means.’
Uriel raised a winged shoulder.
‘Let me sort out your fringe.’
It was getting dark.
The two stayed to wait for Sarah
on the road, wishing they knew
a little more clearly
why they’d been sent.
II
How King David wrote the Psalter
David wrote 356 Psalms,
steeped them in lead
and threw them into the sea.
‘If this scroll be true,’
he said, ‘let it emerge from the water.’
A whale ate it, fishermen
caught it, hauled out the scroll.
David remained unconvinced.
‘Water’s too easy,’ he said
and threw the Psalter into a crater
to see how it would come out.
The scroll fell on an eagle’s back
and again came back to the people.
‘Hmmm,’ said David. ‘I see
I’ll have to think of something else.’
‘David,’ said a voice from Heaven.
‘Don’t push it.’
III
Of the meeting between Jacob and Joseph
… and the father lamented:
‘Son, son,
to find you my eyes
abandoned me,
to reach you my legs
were worn away.’
And the son looked
at the clock and said:
…
(page torn here)
Translated by Tom Phillips
The original Bulgarian text was published in: ‘The Garden of Expectations and the Opposite Door’ (2012), Colibri Publishers, Sofia, Bulgaria.