in the Garden
if they must forthwith still
taste of some tree
in search
of knowledge of
good
and evil, then let
them eat of my Son
the Fruit of the tree of Jesse
from whom He depends, ever
for their desire
because
He let Himself be hung there
as if out to dry
so that they
might later partake
of His dehydrated body
and
His unleavened blood
so as to have
the Knowledge
of Whom
it thenceforth hath been said
He is
the Apple of His Father's eye
by Carl Winderl